Location of Vesta in mid-July, 2011, via Kstars
There have been so many spacecraft launched, both manned and unmanned, that it's easy to forget how difficult such a task is, and how excited we were in the 1950s and 1960s when we were taking our first steps into the final frontier. As a child, I kept a scrap book of newspaper and magazine articles about rockets and spacecraft. In those days, every launch was front-page news, and the popular weekly magazines, such as Life, regularly published lengthy articles about our future in space. The Disney enterprise devoted many of their Sunday broadcasts to space tutorials.
NASA is attempting to revive interest in its spacecraft by calling for a celebration of a Vesta Fiesta to celebrate the arrival of the Dawn spacecraft at Vesta.[1-8] In my area, the United Astronomy Clubs of New Jersey has scheduled its Vesta Fiesta for August 5-7, 2011.
![]() | An artist's rendition of the Dawn spacecraft leaving Earth on its way to Vesta. NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/McREL Image. |
![]() | An image of the asteroid, Vesta, obtained on July 9, 2011, by the Dawn spacecraft. Vesta was 41,000 km distant (26,000 miles) at the time, and the image resolution is about two-and-a-half miles. NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA Image. |