Moonrise above the Pacific
During the spacecraft's Earth-skimming fly-by on March 4 (reported earlier by Hypography), Rosetta's Navigation Cameras captured images looking down and ahead.
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These images were recorded before and after closest approach around 22:00 UTC. During this time, the spacecraft maintained a constant orientation (Moon-facing) so that earlier views are looking almost directly down, at the east coast of the USA, while later views — and the impressive Moon-rise image — were taken looking ahead over the Pacific. The closest approach came at 22:09 UTC at an altitude of 1954.74 km when Rosetta was over the Pacific, west of Mexico.
All pictures were recorded at 1024 x 1024 pixels and cover a field of view (FoV) of 5 degrees x 5 degrees.
The first image (above) shows the Moon rising above the Pacific at 22:06 UTC, just three minutes before the point of closest approach.
The remaining images can be seen at the European Space Agency website at this link:
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMUHOD3M5E_Expanding_0.html
Source: European Space Agency
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