January 27, 2006

Stardust samples better than expected

Closeup of an impact crater in the aerogel from the Stardust probe

Stardust, the probe launched in 1999 to intersect with Comet Wild 2, landed a little less than a week ago, and the preliminary results since then have been quite promising. There have been both large and small impact craters — some large enough to be seen ten feet away. Eventually images of the aerogel will make their way across the Internet to a computer screen near you in the form of Stardust@home (official site) — though I still think it’s a pretty silly “distributed computing” project.

There may be more than a million particles embedded in the aerogel, and the mission is being deemed a success. It certainly is a success, though the life science geek in me would like to see the evidence for extraterrestrial life embedded in the gel, but I suspect that’s asking a little much.

For those of you who like movies and animations, you can check out the Stardust re-entry video. It’s pretty cool; very surreal looking.

[tags]Stardust, stardust@home[/tags]

| 10:57 pm |

1 Comment »

  1. hey i love this image and i am working on a project about stardust and ths helps me alot

    Comment by brianna — February 21, 2007 @ 4:30 pm

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