General
11 July, 2010 14:37
A really nice way to end our Lutetia fly-by coverage! Stuart Atkinson, one of our regular blog visitors, runs his own excellent science & astronomy outreach efforts in the UK (visit his site: Cumbrian Skies). Stuart's sent in a poem this morning in celebration of Rosetta's fabulous results of yesterday. Thanks Stuart! -- Daniel
For all these years you were merely
A smear of light through our telescopes
On the clearest, coldest night; a hint
Of a glint, just a few pixels wide
On even your most perfectly-framed portraits.
But now, now we see you!
Swimming out of the dark - a great
Stone shark, your star-tanned skin pitted
And pocked, scarred after aeons of drifting
Silently through the endless ocean of space.
Here on Earth our faces lit up as we saw
You clearly for the first time; eyes wide
With wonder we traced the strangely familiar
Grooves raked across your sides,
Wondering if Rosetta had doubled back to Mars
And raced past Phobos by mistake –
Then you were gone, falling back into the black,
Not to be seen by human eyes again for a thousand
Blue Moons or more. But we know you now,
We know you; you’ll never be just a speck of light again.
© Stuart Atkinson 2010
4 comments | "LUTETIA IN THE LIGHT"












12-07-2010 • 17:05:54
First stereo pictures (anaglyph) of Lutetia on Flickr
http://www.flickr.com/photos/9301998@N08/4786403142/
Click "ALL SIZES" on this page
11-07-2010 • 16:18:50
Andrew Brown wrote:
> Wo(n)derful Poem.
Agreed.
> Shame Rosetta cannot encounter
> any more asteroids, or could she
> before the comet arrival???
Likely not before the GC visit, but
there should be good chances for
the times afterwards.
Ingo.
11-07-2010 • 15:38:32
Woderful Poem. Do I have your permission to print it out & perhaps distribute it to friends ?????
Shame Rosetta cannot encounter any more asteroids, or could she before the comet arrival???
Rosetta is clearly capable of very serious & indepth scientific research, lets maximis that asset. :)
Can I also ask, when will the next image updates be, including the forst colour ones, though I suspect like planet Mercury, the difference between the B & W ones & the colour ones will be indistinct. :)
Andrew Brown.
11-07-2010 • 19:43:40
Andrew: Drop a note to the author, Stuart Atkinson via STUARTATK@aol.com -- Cheers, Daniel