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Dawn probe to explore origins of solar system

Saturday, 7 July 2007


WASHINGTON, July 6 (AFP): The US spacecraft Dawn, due to launch Sunday, will take a close look at two massive asteroids to try to penetrate the mystery of our solar system's origins 4.6 billion years ago.
By examining the two celestial bodies Ceres and Vesta in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, scientists hope the unmanned Dawn probe will shed light on the earliest moments in the birth of the solar system.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) says the Dawn mission should provide a better understanding of the building blocks that formed the terrestrial planets and how the two "protoplanets" followed different evolutionary paths.
The deep-space explorer, measuring 1.64 meters (yards) long and 1.27 meters (yards) wide when its solar array is retracted, is equipped with a high- definition camera and two spectrometers to study the two massive asteroids.
Ceres, discovered in 1801, has a spherical shape and has a diameter of about 960 kilometers (596 miles). Scientists believe it may have a layer of thick ice under its crust, covering a rocky core.
Ceres was classified in 2006 as a "dwarf planet", according to a new definition by astronomers to describe asteroids in the solar system.
The decision by the International Astronomical Union was the result of a debate about the status of Pluto, which is now classified as a dwarf planet along with Ceres and another celestial body, Eris.
Vesta, discovered in 1807, is smaller than Ceres but the third largest asteroid in the solar system. With a diameter of 520 kilometers (323 miles), Vesta has a rocky surface without a trace of water and a hot interior.
Scientists are especially interested in the enormous crater on the south pole of Vesta, 460 kilometers (285 miles) wide and 13 kilometers (8 miles) deep, which is believed to be the result of a major collision.