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This Jan. 13 photograph was taken by Mt Palomar's 200-inch telescope as the Deep Impact spacecraft was at a distance of about 260,000 kilometers (163,000 miles) from Earth and moving at a speed of about 16,000 kilometers per hour (10,000 miles per hour). The high speed of the spacecraft causes it to appear as a long streak across the sky in the constellation Virgo during the 10-minute exposure time of the image.
The spacecraft will travel to comet Tempel 1 and release an impactor, creating a crater on the surface of the comet. Scientists believe the exposed materials may give clues to the formation of our solar system.
| Name | Value | Additional Values |
|---|---|---|
| Target | 9P/Tempel | |
| System | Periodic Comets | |
| Target Type | Comet | |
| Mission | Deep Impact | Palomar Observatory |
| Instrument Host | Deep Impact | Palomar Observatory |
| Host Type | Impactor | Ground-Based Telescope |
| Instrument | Hale Telescope | |
| Detector | ||
| Extra Keywords | Color, Crater, Impact | |
| Acquisition Date | ||
| Release Date | 2005-01-18 | |
| Date in Caption | ||
| Image Credit | NASA/JPL/CalTech | |
| Source | photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA07266 | |
| Identifier | PIA07266 | |