Japanese space rovers send photos of asteroid Ryugu

Japanese space rovers send photos of asteroid Ryugu
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An image taken Hayabusa2 shows the rocky surface of asteroid Ryugu. (JAXA, The University of Tokyo and partner institutions via AP)
Japanese space rovers send photos of asteroid Ryugu
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A photo from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, shows the shadow, top left, of Japanese unmanned spacecraft Hayabusa2 over the asteroid Ryugu on September 21. (JAXA via AP)
Updated 28 September 2018
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Japanese space rovers send photos of asteroid Ryugu

Japanese space rovers send photos of asteroid Ryugu

TOKYO: New photos taken on the surface of an asteroid show that it is (drum roll, please) ... rocky.
It may be no surprise, but Japan space agency scientists and engineers are thrilled by the images being sent to Earth by two jumping robotic rovers that they dropped onto an asteroid about 280 million kilometers away.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency posted the latest photos on its website late Thursday. They show slightly tilted close-ups of the rocky surface from different locations.

“I cannot find words to express how happy I am that we were able to realize mobile exploration on the surface of an asteroid,” project manager Yuichi Tsuda said on the space agency’s website.
It took more than three years for the unmanned Hayabusa2 spacecraft to reach the vicinity of asteroid Ryugu. One week ago, the craft successfully dropped a small capsule with two rovers onto its surface. The rovers, each about the size of circular cookie tin, don’t have wheels but jump around the asteroid.
Hayabusa2 is scheduled to drop a German-French lander with four observation devices onto the asteroid next week. It later will attempt to land on the asteroid itself to collect samples to send back to researchers on Earth.