I Dawn dead in Ceres orbit, ran out of fuel Oct 2018

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The Dawn spacecraft successfully observed Ceres from a distance of 238,000 miles on January 13, 2015, capturing over half of its surface at a resolution of 27 pixels. The mission aimed to enter a polar orbit around Ceres, with a planned descent to an altitude of 375 km, but faced challenges due to limited hydrazine propellant for attitude control. A cosmic ray event in September 2014 had previously disrupted the propulsion system, complicating the approach trajectory. Despite these issues, the spacecraft was expected to achieve a stable orbit around Ceres, ultimately becoming a "perpetual satellite" as it ran out of fuel. The mission's success would provide valuable data on Ceres' physical characteristics and surface mapping.
  • #781
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/image-detail.html?id=PIA20188
This was taken near Ceres' South Pole. At Ceres' poles the sun is always down near the horizon (or below).
Upper part is dark sky, to see the landscape you may need to scroll down.
PIA20188.jpg

If for some reason image doesn't load it may help to press "reply".
 
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Astronomy news on Phys.org
  • #782
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  • #783
Wow.
 
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  • #784
Mheslep and Runner, so glad you like the images from the new low-down perspective!

Latest update from Rayman suggests that Dawn will have completed sending data sometime tonight (evening of the 22nd December) and will resume observations:

==quote http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html ==
December 21, 2015 -New Mapping Proceeding Smoothly

Since Dec. 18, Dawn has been taking neutron spectra, infrared spectra, gamma ray spectra, and photographs of Ceres from the lowest altitude orbit. As the spacecraft revolves around the dwarf planet, it points its sensors at the ground but also switches among its auxiliary radio antennas to use whichever is pointed closest to Earth. That allows engineers and scientists to use the radio signal to measure the orbital motion very accurately to map the gravity field.

Tonight Dawn will turn to point its main antenna to Earth for more than 27 hours. Tomorrow night, after transmitting most of its pictures and other data, it will resume observing Ceres.
==endquote==
"tonight" in that update was the night of the 21st---that's when the transmission started. Presumably the transmission is finished---in fact we're seeing some of the pictures! "tomorrow night" is the night of the 22nd, which is now, and presumably observation has been resumed or will be shortly.

I wonder when preliminary results from the gamma spectroscopy will be ready---and will they be willing to share some initial conclusions about the a few chemical abundance. I'd love to see some provisional estimates! AFAIK Om is the only one of us who corresponds with Marc Rayman by email.

Can we get Rayman to tell us what chemical elements in the surface material they will be measuring the abundances of? Silicon? Carbon? Oxygen? Aluminum? Nitrogen?
I'm eager to get an idea of what to expect to eventually see abundance numbers for.
 
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  • #785
Anyone readily know the magnification of that imager? I looked a bit without luck. The imager appears to be, say, 1km above the surface. 200x?
 
  • #786
mheslep said:
Anyone readily know the magnification of that imager? I looked a bit without luck. The imager appears to be, say, 1km above the surface. 200x?
Mheslep, you probably saw this earlier table---they've since revised the final target altitude from 375 to 385 km. The "pixel size" here doesn't directly answer your question but might be relevant to our understanding.
Code:
Orbit    dates      altitude(km)  pixelsize(m) res/HST  period  soccerball at
RC3    April 23–May 9    (13,600)    (1,300)    24     15 days    (3.0 meters)
Survey    June 6-30      (4,400)      (410)     73     3.1 days    (1.0 meters)
HAMO    Aug 17–Oct 23    (1,470)      (140)     217    19 hours    (33 cm)
LAMO Dec 15–end of mission (375)      (35)      850    5.5 hours    (8.5 cm)

385 is close enough to 375 so we can take the table as approximately right. So a pixel, in these pictures is about 35 meters.

Some links:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/journal.asp
 
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  • #787
That figure of 35 meters per pixel is also repeated here---the news article that Om linked us to:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=4802
BTW here's an interesting excerpt from that news article:
==quote==
..Dawn's other instruments also began their intense period of observations this month. The visible and infrared mapping spectrometer will help identify minerals by looking at how various wavelengths of light are reflected by the surface of Ceres. The gamma ray and neutron detector is also active. By measuring the energies and numbers of gamma rays and neutrons, two components of nuclear radiation, it will help scientists determine the abundances of some elements on Ceres.

Earlier in December, Dawn science team members revealed that the bright material found in such notable craters as Occator is consistent with salt -- and proposed that a type of magnesium sulfate called hexahydrite may be present. A different group of Dawn scientists found that Ceres also contains ammoniated clays. Because ammonia is abundant in the outer solar system, this finding suggests that Ceres could have formed in the vicinity of Neptune and migrated inward, or formed in place with material that migrated in from the outer solar system...
==endquote==
 
  • #788
==quote Rayman update 23 Dec==
December 23, 2015 -Dawn Observing Ceres Again

Dawn sent its latest measurements to mission control at JPL as it completed five revolutions around Ceres, each lasting about 5.4 hours. Around 11:30 p.m. PST on Dec. 22, it once again aimed its scientific instruments at the rocky, icy surface beneath it and began collecting more data.
==endquote==

Some of us may have wondered how they can be mapping irregularities in Ceres' gravitational field (including variations in subsurface material density) while doing everything else. That involves listening for the Doppler shift in a constant radio signal back to Earth as Dawn speeds up and slows down in orbit while passing over variable density terrain.
The problem is Dawn can't have its main antenna (used to transmit data) aimed at Earth while it has its camera and sensors aimed at the ground. But as Rayman explained it has several small antennas on different sides of the craft. It keeps sending the tracking signal from whatever small antenna is aimed most nearly in Earth's direction.

It's surprising how many observation tasks the probe is now performing at once. Imaging with the main camera. Optical and IR spectroscopy. Gamma and neutron (counting and) spectroscopy. Mapping variations in gravity.
 
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  • #789
BTW:
24Dec 17:47, 360.47 km, 105º to Npole, speed 275 m/s
24Dec 18:09, 361:49 km, 80º to Npole, speed 274 m/s
It appears that the line of apsides keeps rotating---at least so far it has been with max altitude (apoapsis) progressing more sunwards as min (periapsis) accordingly more antisunwards.
 
  • #790
Is there any lower limit to orbital altitude around such a planetoid (above the surface)? I suppose there might be a few gas molecules near the surface that would drag on a the resulting orbital velocity of a couple km/s. But once all other mission objectives have been achieved, why not take the risk, say, a year or so from now, descend to 10m.
"Better to burn out than to fade away" - The Kergan
 
  • #791
mheslep said:
Is there any lower limit to orbital altitude around such a planetoid (above the surface)? I suppose there might be a few gas molecules near the surface that would drag on a the resulting orbital velocity of a couple km/s. But once all other mission objectives have been achieved, why not take the risk, say, a year or so from now, descend to 10m.
"Better to burn out than to fade away" - The Kergan
I approve the adventurous spirit of this suggestion. There are several considerations----as I understand it the plan is to keep on taking and transmitting data at this level until the hydrazine runs out.

You need hydrazine to adjust the orientation so as to keep instruments pointed at the ground, and then you need more hydrazine to turn the craft to point its main antenna at Earth when you are ready to transmit data.

So according to the current plan it wouldn't do any good to get in closer after the end of the mission (even if the probe COULD descend further). Without attitude control the craft couldn't do anything, couldn't make observations, transmit data, or even keep its solar panels facing the sun.

Another consideration is that various space agencies have adopted rules about contamination of solar system bodies which might later be investigated for chemical traces of earlier life. Someone else may know more about this and be better prepared to answer. I have an idea that they don't WANT the probe to crash into Ceres because that might raise the issue of contamination. Ceres is thought to consist of very old material, from near the time of the formation of the solar system---until we know more we want to keep it clean, which enhances its scientific value.

So my thought is that they are being careful to leave Dawn in a STABLE orbit around Ceres, when the hydrazine runs out and the mission is over. So that there is virtually no chance of its ever crashing.

there is still one possible question: why didn't they cut the current plan of observation short and leave a reserve of hydrazine so they could descend to an even lower stable orbit?

They have plenty of PROPELLANT left (that is the noble gas Xenon) so why not choose to go to an even lower orbit? The answer must have involved various trade-offs. To descend at this point takes a lot of solar powered thrust, it is a long arduous task and it requires a lot of ATTITUDE CONTOL. It is very costly in terms of hydrazine which is used to keep the solar panels facing the Sun while the ion engine is meanwhile aimed in the right direction. And then used periodically to point the main antenna at Earth so they can communicate and review the trajectory and revise instructions. So going to an even lower orbit would have been very costly in terms of the scarce hydrazine reserve (used for attitude control) and would have eaten into the main mission which is supposed to be accomplished at this current altitude.

Basically this is just guessing on my part, trying my best to answer. Rayman has probably addressed your question in one of his monthly journal entries---but there is no topic index so I can't easily find out which entries would be relevant. You might enjoy browsing though:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/journal.asp
 
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  • #792
One of the previous journal entries discussed that orbit in more detail. Avoiding contamination was one of the main points. The current orbit is not stable - but its expected lifetime is at least 50 years, so even if the mission shows signs of habitability for Earth-based microbes we still have some decades to launch another mission to get Dawn out of the way.
If Dawn would go lower, figure out that Ceres might be able to support life coming from Earth, and then fail, we would have a problem.

We are used to stable orbits close to Earth, but it is more like a lucky coincidence to have them for basically every inclination, see this paper for details.
 
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  • #793
mfb said:
...
We are used to stable orbits close to Earth, but it is more like a lucky coincidence to have them for basically every inclination, see this paper for details.
Good reference! I'll quote the abstract:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1309.5244v1
Why do Earth satellites stay up?
Scott Tremaine, Tomer Yavetz
(Submitted on 20 Sep 2013)
Satellites in low Earth orbits must accurately conserve their orbital eccentricity, since a decrease in perigee of only 5-10% would cause them to crash. However, these satellites are subject to gravitational perturbations from the Earth's multipole moments, the Moon, and the Sun that are not spherically symmetric and hence do not conserve angular momentum, especially over the tens of thousands of orbits made by a typical satellite. Why then do satellites not crash? We describe a vector-based analysis of the long-term behavior of satellite orbits and apply this to several toy systems containing a single non-Keplerian perturbing potential. If only the quadrupole potential from the Earth's equatorial bulge is present, all near-circular orbits are stable. If only the octupole potential is present, all such orbits are unstable. If only the lunar or solar potential is present, all near-circular orbits with inclinations to the ecliptic exceeding 39 degrees are unstable. We describe the behavior of satellites in the simultaneous presence of all of these perturbations and show that almost all low Earth orbits are stable because of an accidental property of the dominant quadrupole potential. ...
10 pages, 1 figure; published in American Journal of Physics, Volume 82, Issue 8, p.769-777

In this case we are dealing with a polar orbit, inclination to the ecliptic WAY more than 39 degrees. I gather that if the Earth were perfectly round and uniform (i.e. Keplerian potential, no multipole moments) then merely the sun or moon's perturbation would be enough to make such inclined orbits unstable! It's just luck that Earth has the right quadrupole moment to nullify those effects.
 
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  • #794
The behavior of the eccentricity and line of apsides (as best I can judge them) of Dawn's simulated orbit is beginning to make sense.
The line of apsides now seems very roughly to pass through the equator, with apoapsis on the day side.
25Dec 18:16 UTC, 378.94 km, 106º to Spole
25Dec 18:36 UTC, 378.65 km, 93º to Spole
The max used to be down closer to the S pole. Now it has swung around by something like 90º---it is on the dayside near the equator. I would guess something like 100º to S pole. That Tremaine-Yavetz reference is instructive and helpful.

Dawn team has a pretty nice interactive graphic describing the GRaND instrument (gamma ray and neutron spectrometer)
Introduction is here:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/technology/grand.html
Then you click on the image and it gets you this:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/dawn/swf/GRAND/Grand_animation.swf
and that, after a few seconds brings up a diagram that you can interrogate to get a bunch of information including explanation of how the GRaND instrument works and what chemical elements it can "constrain" the abundance of. That is, get a handle on, sometimes by some fairly complicated inference, from the energies of gamma rays and neutrons coming off Ceres' surface.

Elements whose abundances they can get a handle on include H, C (light enough to slow the fast neutrons that collide with them)
and also O, Mg, Al, Si, Cl, Ca, Ti, Fe.
You can play around with the graphic and get pop-ups to explain some of how these elements are identified.

Also there are elements like K, Th, and U that have naturally radioactive isotopes whose decay involves a distinctive gamma energy. They are included in the diagram as well.
 
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  • #795
I gather Dawn has temporarily stopped observing so it can turn main antenna towards Earth and transmit data. Madrid antenna #55 is receiving data at 125 kilobit per second.
https://eyes.nasa.gov/dsn/dsn.html
The last time stopped observing to transmit was around 22 December. Now it is only 4 days later and it is transmitting again. this is more frequent than in HAMO, the previous orbit. Maybe it is collecting so much more data now, in low orbit, that it has to take transmission breaks more often.

Hydrogen and Carbon are the two lightest elements that can be counted on to be really abundant in Ceres surface material.
Light nuclei are better at slowing down neutrons. So Dawn can measure the abundance of H and C by what fraction of the escaping neutrons have been slowed down by successive collisions, compared with how many are still going fast.

Why are light nuclei better at slowing down neutrons? Because when you smack into something massive it hardly moves, so it absorbs little energy and you bounce off going nearly the same speed you came in with.

But when you bounce off something light, it gets a kick and takes some of your kinetic energy and you come off noticeably slower.
 
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  • #796
Here are some graphics that show the (log) abundance of chemical elements in various contexts---the sun, the planets of the inner solar system, the Earth's continental crust...
https://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/PLANETS/Geochem.htm
The first one shows abundances in the sun. Scroll down for the others.

Some of the text should be read critically, the author is a geochemist, not an astronomer. Showing the log abundances by the sizes of circles, roughly superimposed on the periodic table ordering of elements, though, was helpful at least to me.
 
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  • #797
marcus said:
...
Dawn team has a pretty nice interactive graphic describing the GRaND instrument (gamma ray and neutron spectrometer)
Introduction is here:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/technology/grand.html
Then you click on the image and it gets you this:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/dawn/swf/GRAND/Grand_animation.swf
and that, after a few seconds brings up a diagram that you can interrogate to get a bunch of information including explanation of how the GRaND instrument works and what chemical elements it can "constrain" the abundance of. That is, get a handle on, sometimes by some fairly complicated inference, from the energies of gamma rays and neutrons coming off Ceres' surface.

Elements whose abundances they can get a handle on include H, C (light enough to slow the fast neutrons that collide with them)
and also O, Mg, Al, Si, Cl, Ca, Ti, Fe.

You can play around with the graphic and get pop-ups to explain some of how these elements are identified.

Also there are elements like K, Th, and U that have naturally radioactive isotopes whose decay involves a distinctive gamma energy. They are included in the diagram as well.

The probe is collecting such a volume of data that it has to pause every few days and dump to Earth. If you've been reading Marc Rayman's updates you know it completed a dump and resumed collecting data around noon on the 22 December. It looks as if it paused taking data and took another communication break sometime around 26 December, and resumed normal activity by morning of 28 Dec. I don't know this for sure, just judging from DSN activity. Around the 27 Dec I saw there was a lot of data transmission involving Dawn and several antennas of the Deep Space Network. Rates like 125 kilobit per second.
Today, 28 Dec, what I saw was mostly just the tracking signal they listen to detect variations in Ceres gravitational field as Dawn passes over various geological formations and types of terrain.
 
  • #798
A worrisome detail: as of 29Dec 9AM pacific, checking DSN, I see that Madrid antennas #63 and 54 are both assigned to Dawn and there is no signal either way on either one. Has some trouble with communication developed? We haven't had a status update from Rayman for almost a week. The last one was 23 Dec.
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html
 
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  • #799
marcus said:
A worrisome detail: as of 29Dec 9AM pacific, checking DSN, I see that Madrid antennas #63 and 54 are both assigned to Dawn and there is no signal either way on either one. Has some trouble with communication developed? We haven't had a status update from Rayman for almost a week. The last one was 23 Dec.
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status.html

They may have just been messing with us...

Via Twitter:
NASA's Dawn Mission ‏@NASA_Dawn 32 minutes ago
Update: Navigators are designing a small maneuver to adjust my orbit. Altitude at #Ceres ~240 mi.
 
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  • #800
OmCheeto said:
...
Via Twitter:
NASA's Dawn Mission ‏@NASA_Dawn 32 minutes ago
Update: Navigators are designing a small maneuver to adjust my orbit. Altitude at #Ceres ~240 mi.
Thanks, Om. I'm glad to know the explanation.

Reminding people that a major new feature of Dawn's data gathering at this lowest orbit is the GRaND instrument, which can get a handle on chemical element abundances in the surface material.
marcus said:
...
Dawn team has a pretty nice interactive graphic describing the GRaND instrument (gamma ray and neutron spectrometer)
Introduction is here:
http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/technology/grand.html
Then you click on the image and it gets you this:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/dawn/swf/GRAND/Grand_animation.swf
and that, after a few seconds brings up a diagram that you can interrogate to get a bunch of information including explanation of how the GRaND instrument works and what chemical elements it can "constrain" the abundance of. That is, get a handle on, sometimes by some fairly complicated inference, from the energies of gamma rays and neutrons coming off Ceres' surface.

Elements whose abundances they can get a handle on include H, C (light enough to slow the fast neutrons that collide with them)
and also O, Mg, Al, Si, Cl, Ca, Ti, Fe.
You can play around with the graphic and get pop-ups to explain some of how these elements are identified.

Also there are elements like K, Th, and U that have naturally radioactive isotopes whose decay involves a distinctive gamma energy. They are included in the diagram as well.
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/dawn/swf/GRAND/Grand_animation.swf
What this gives, after a few seconds, is a more elaborate and informative version of this simple graphic posted earlier
gamma.jpg


and some idea how the instrument itself works to identify characteristic radiation coming from the surface.
 
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  • #801
This confirms what Om saw earlier via Twitter:
==quote Rayman update==
December 29, 2015 -Flight Team Preparing Small Adjustment to Orbit

Dawn remains in good health as it continues to take pictures and make other measurements of Ceres. As at Vesta, occasional small adjustments to its orbital motion will be required at this low altitude to keep it synchronized with the observing plan. The flight team is working on the detailed flight plan for the first of these "orbit maintenance maneuvers," scheduled for Dec. 31.
==endquote==
 
  • #802
I hope they release better images of the bright spots soon, but I can imagine that they want to analyze them first.
 
  • #803
mfb said:
I hope they release better images of the bright spots soon, but I can imagine that they want to analyze them first.
From some back of the napkin calculations, it looks as though it now takes about 15 days to photograph everything near the equator.
So, I'm guessing, that if we're lucky, we will see images within a week.
If we are not so lucky, it may be a few months.

ps.
Interesting article about "methane" was pointed to by the Dawn team on Facebook about an hour ago:
Cold reaction has hot implications for evolution of life [American Geophysical Union]
Dec 15, 2015
Amy McDermott

When carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas mingle deep underground, they transform into methane and water—the building blocks of life.

Scientists once thought the reaction, called Sabatier synthesis, could only proceed above 150 degrees Celsius. Life, they thought, was conceived deep in the scalding vents of an ancient ocean. But the Sabatier process also runs cooler, finds a new study presented at the 2015 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting. With the right catalyst, the reaction works at room temperature, the study found.

That means “life didn’t necessarily evolve in hot soupy seas at mid-ocean ridges,” said Giuseppe Etiope, a senior geologist at the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) in Rome and lead author of the study. “It also could have evolved in continents—in the rocks.”
...

‑Amy McDermott is a graduate student in the Science Communication program at UC Santa Cruz. You can follow her on twitter at @amygmcdermott.
 
  • #804
There are also hot rocks. Temperature is not the only reason hydrothermal vents are interesting.
 
  • #805
http://dawnblog.jpl.nasa.gov/2015/12/31/dawn-journal-december-31/

DECEMBER DAWN JOURNAL IS OUT!

This journal entry is unusually visually rich with many stunning and fascinating images of Ceres' surface. Do check it out!
But it also has this about the GRaND data being taken:
==quote Rayman==
...
With the spacecraft this close to the ground, it can measure two kinds of nuclear radiation that come from as much as a yard (meter) deep. The radiation carries the signatures of the atoms there, allowing scientists to inventory some of the key chemical elements of geological interest. One component of this radiation is gamma ray photons, a high energy form of electromagnetic radiation with a frequency beyond visible light, beyond ultraviolet, even beyond X-rays. Neutrons in the radiation are entirely different from gamma rays. They are particles usually found in the nuclei of atoms (for those of you who happen to look there). Indeed, outweighing protons, and outnumbering them in most kinds of atoms, they constitute most of the mass of atoms other than hydrogen in Ceres (and everywhere else in the universe, including in your correspondent).

To tell us what members of the periodic table of the elements are present, Dawn’s gamma ray and neutron detector (GRaND) does more than detect those two kinds of radiation. Despite its name, GRaND is not at all pretentious, but its capabilities are quite impressive. Consisting of 21 sensors, the device measures the energy of each gamma ray photon and of each neutron. (That doesn’t lend itself to as engaging an acronym.) It is these gamma ray spectra and neutron spectra that reveal the identities of the atomic species in the ground.

Some of the gamma rays are produced by radioactive elements, but most of them and the neutrons are generated as byproducts of cosmic rays impinging on Ceres. Space is pervaded by cosmic radiation, composed of a variety of subatomic particles that originate outside our solar system. Earth’s atmosphere and magnetic field protect the surface (and those who dwell there) from cosmic rays, but Ceres lacks such defenses. The cosmic rays interact with nuclei of atoms, and some of the gamma rays and neutrons that are released escape back into space where they are intercepted by GRaND on the orbiting Dawn.
==endquote==

It also has the latest word on the BRIGHT SPOTS on some of the crater floors. They are not pure white, many have a slight blueish tinge. The best known, the Occator crater spots, have a faint reddish tinge. It might take an instrument more sensitive than the human eye to detect this--we might say it was just some tone of white. But the variation in color gives clues as to what salts are there. Rayman discusses this and how the spots might have formed. Magnesium sulfate (a compound somewhat akin to "epsom salts") is considered as a likely candidate.

Rayman also discussed the indicated presence of AMMONIA-BEARING minerals on Ceres' surface. Ammoniated clays---this was not expected and is very interesting. Also an important advantage is Ceres ever becomes a site for habitation and chemical industry.

Things seem to be going OK. This is a great mission! The targets (especially Ceres) and the solar powered ion propulsion technology were forward looking. I was worried Dawn might not make it down to this final nearest orbit and am very glad it seems so far to be operating as planned.
 
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  • #806
Besides the December 2015 Dawn Journal, we also have a new status update for 31 December:

==quote Rayman==
December 31, 2015 -Dawn Busy as Year Ends

Dawn is transmitting its latest Ceres observations, orbiting the dwarf planet while pointing its main antenna to Earth. This afternoon the spacecraft will use its ion engine to perform an orbit maintenance maneuver, which will keep its orbit matched with the plan for obtaining good coverage of the world beneath it. Following that, the probe will turn again to point its instruments at Ceres and resume collecting data.

The December Dawn Journal describes the highest priority scientific observations Dawn is conducting in this fourth and final mapping orbit.
==endquote==
 
  • #807
Rayman said:
[neutrons] constitute most of the mass of atoms other than hydrogen in Ceres (and everywhere else in the universe, including in your correspondent).
Uh. The human body has more weight from protons than from neutrons, and if we exclude hydrogen the difference is negligible. We are composed of 65% oxygen-16, 18% carbon-12, 10% hydrogen-1, 3% nitrogen-14, 1.4% calcium-40, 1.1% phosphorus-31 and 1.5% other isotopes.
Of this list, phosphorus is the only isotope with more neutrons (16) than protons (15). This tiny difference has no chance against the 10% mass from hydrogen (pure protons). The 0.15% mass difference between protons and neutrons is negligible as well. Even if the 1.5% mass in the other isotopes would be pure neutrons, protons would win. Iron is the first element where the number of neutrons is significantly more (30 neutrons for 26 protons in the most frequent isotope), but its contribution to a human body is just 0.006%.
 
  • #808
mfb said:
Uh. The human body has more weight from protons than from neutrons, and if we exclude hydrogen the difference is negligible. We are composed of 65% oxygen-16, 18% carbon-12, 10% hydrogen-1, 3% nitrogen-14, 1.4% calcium-40, 1.1% phosphorus-31 and 1.5% other isotopes.
Of this list, phosphorus is the only isotope with more neutrons (16) than protons (15). This tiny difference has no chance against the 10% mass from hydrogen (pure protons). The 0.15% mass difference between protons and neutrons is negligible as well. Even if the 1.5% mass in the other isotopes would be pure neutrons, protons would win. Iron is the first element where the number of neutrons is significantly more (30 neutrons for 26 protons in the most frequent isotope), but its contribution to a human body is just 0.006%.
I like very much the critical checking of Rayman's statement in quantitative detail.
It inspires me to ask rather than take what he says for granted. Isn't it true though that most of the mass in an oxygen-16 atom is in the neutrons?
Just because neutrons are very very slightly more massive than protons?
Isn't that also true about carbon-12?
So Rayman says:
" neutrons constitute most of the mass of atoms other than hydrogen ... in your correspondent."

It seems true that if you reduce the human body to atoms and sort out and remove all the hydrogen atoms---so now you have all the atoms other than hydrogen in the body---then all or at least the overwhelming majority of those atoms have at least as many neutrons as protons. And so...

And so, by a slim majority, more than half of the mass of those atoms (other than hydrogen) IS IN FACT in the neutrons. So the neutrons constitute most of the mass of those atoms (other than hydrogen) by a very slim majority.

Rayman was just being playful I think, in veering off into near irrelevancy, but he may in a sense have been right.
 
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  • #809
Nucleons, Neutrons... whatever.

I'm wishing Dawn, Dr. Rayman, and everyone, a Happy New Year! :smile:
 
  • #810
Ignoring the technical issues with nuclear binding energy, something like 50.1% neutrons (half of the effect from the mass difference, the other half from phosphorus) - well, technically it is more than 50%, but "most"?
 
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