Stunning Images Of Mercury Surface Captured By ESA Spacecraft BepiColombo know details
The European Space Agency’s BepiColombo spacecraft has captured amazing pictures of Mercury. It was flying only a few hundred kilometers above the planet. It has taken pictures of the planet’s north pole where icy craters are visible. Their floors are covered in permanent shadow while on the surface endless plains can be seen shining in the sunlight.
European Space Agency Director General Joseph Eschbacher released the photos during a press conference on Thursday. According to ESA, frozen water may be present in the dark crater clicked by BepiColombo’s Monitoring Camera 1 (M-CAM 1). These craters are known to be the coldest craters in the Solar System, even though Mercury is closest to the Sun. The spacecraft will find out whether frozen water is actually present there or not. But it will do this exploration in 2026 when it will enter its orbit.
Only slightly larger than our own Moon, Mercury orbits very close to the Sun. It orbits at an average distance of about 58 million kilometers. While in orbit around Mercury, BepiColombo aims to discover why the planet only has a thin layer of rocks, while the planet has a much larger iron core, accounting for 60 percent of its mass.
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