PIA10120: Earth Departure Movie

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Target Name: Earth
Is a satellite of: Sol (our sun)
Mission: MESSENGER
Spacecraft: MESSENGER
Instrument: Mercury Dual Imaging System - Wide Angle
Product Size: 507 samples x 507 lines
Produced By: Johns Hopkins University/APL
Full-Res TIFF: PIA10120.tif (772.2 kB)
Full-Res JPEG: PIA10120.jpg (16.44 kB)

Original Caption Released with Image:

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Earth Departure Movie
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Earth Departure Movie
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The Mercury-bound MESSENGER spacecraft captured several stunning images of Earth during a gravity assist swingby of its home planet on Aug. 2, 2005. Several hundred images, taken with the wide-angle camera in MESSENGER's Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS), were sequenced into a movie documenting the view from MESSENGER as it departed Earth.

Comprising 358 frames taken over 24 hours, the movie follows Earth through one complete rotation. The spacecraft was 40,761 miles (65,598 kilometers) above South America when the camera started rolling on Aug. 2. It was 270,847 miles (435,885 kilometers) away from Earth—farther than the Moon's orbit—when it snapped the last image on Aug. 3.

These images are from MESSENGER, a NASA Discovery mission to conduct the first orbital study of the innermost planet, Mercury. For information regarding the use of images, see the MESSENGER image use policy.

Image Credit:
NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington

Image Addition Date:
2005-08-02