

Ben Harder
Operating on a makeshift navigation system and performing an extra mission assigned on the fly, NASA's Deep Space 1 probe (DS1) has executed a stunning rendezvous with a comet.

Borrelly's nucleus, from about 3,417 km away.
NASA/JPL
The probe passed within 2,200 kilometers of Comet Borrelly's frozen nucleus and through the comet's coma of dust and gas. During the fly-by, DS1 captured black-and-white and infrared images of the nucleus as well as data about ions and other particles that radiate from it.
The Sept. 22 encounter occurred between the orbital paths of Earth and Mars, just days after Borrelly reached the point in its 6.9-year orbit closest to the sun. The only other probe that's photographed a comet's nucleus is the European Space Agency's probe Giotto, which encountered Comet Halley in 1986.
Data from DS1's encounter hint at some surprises. The center of Borrelly's envelope of ions is offset from the nucleus by about 7,000 km. This unexpected finding, supported by visual images, indicates that the fissures spewing jets of ionized gas are clustered on one side of the comet's nucleus, says David T. Young, a mission scientist.
The encounter also confirms some assumptions. Harold A. Weaver, a comet specialist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, is pleased by images showing that the nucleus is 8 km long and 4 km wide. Using data from the Hubble Space Telescope of Borrelly's brightness, he had predicted those dimensions, but nailing them down "takes a spacecraft flying through the coma," he says.
Comet Borrelly wasn't on the itinerary when scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., launched DS1 in October 1998. The probe completed its primary mission—testing its payload of a dozen experimental technologies, including an ion-propulsion engine—in September 1999. That's when the team decided to go after Borrelly.
Just months into the 2-year journey to the comet, however, DS1's main navigational camera broke. Scientists managed to jury-rig another on-board camera to track stars, enabling the crippled probe to keep navigating. Still, they weren't sure that DS1, built without a protective coating, could withstand the whizzing dust particles in the comet's coma.
The probe's success bodes well for several upcoming missions to comets. Further data analysis will also help scientists know what to expect when navigating probes within the comas, says Joseph Veverka, an astronomer at Cornell University. Veverka and his team plan to usher a NASA probe called Contour past at least two comet nuclei after its launch in July 2002.
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2001. Deep Space 1 mission status. NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory press release. Sept. 22. Available at http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/releases/2001/release_2001_189.html
Rayman, M.D. 2001. The Deep Space 1 extended mission: Challenges in preparing for an encounter with Comet Borrelly. 52nd International Astronautical Congress. Oct. 1–5. Toulouse, France.
For additional information on Deep Space 1, see http://nmp.jpl.nasa.gov/ds1/.
Michael F. A'Hearn
Department of Astronomy
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742-2421
Marc D. Rayman
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
California Institute of Technology
4800 Oak Grove Drive
Pasadena, CA 91109-8099
Joseph Veverka
310 Space Science
Department of Astronomy
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853
Harold A. Weaver
Physics and Astronomy Department
Homewood Campus
The Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD 21218
David T. Young
Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences
2455 Hayward Street
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
From Science News, Volume 160, No. 13, September 29, 2001, p. 196.