BepiColombo's First Pictures of Mercury

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BepiColombo recently had its first close flyby of Mercury, its eventual mission target, and got to snap some pictures to commemorate the event. Even at this early stage of the mission, these images are some of the clearest we have ever had of the innermost planet.

The spacecraft itself passed within about 199 km of the planet's surface. Unfortunately, it was on the night side of the planet at that point, and as such, nothing was visible on the surface from that close. However, the probe did start taking photos immediately after the closest approach, and up to 4 hours later. Impressively, it also directly sent the messages back to its handlers on Earth within 12 hours.

Some of the visible craters on Mercury from images snapped during BepiColombo's first flyby, as well as some craft instrumentation visible on the left side of the picture.

Scientists' general first impressions of the new images were positive. In addition to capturing the planet's surface, mission controllers attempted to capture images of the probe's equipment itself to check its structural integrity. All appeared nominal, ensuring the probe will be in good shape to start conducting its scientific mission in 2026 after five more flybys of Mercury (and a few of Earth and Venus).

In the images of the planet, several distinct features are visible, including some craters that are of interest to planetary scientists. Before they get a chance to explore them in more detail, though, the probe will have to slow down to begin its primary science mission. When that starts, BepiColombo will actually split into two different orbiting probes - ESA's Mercury Planet Orbiter, which will primarily be responsible for mapping the planet's surface, and JAXA's Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter, which will take a closer look at the planet's core.

Details of BepiColombo's first Mercury flyby.

Some of the scientific instruments on those probes were operating during this first flyby, though their data still needs to be analyzed. Mission scientists expressed their excitement at getting their hands on some of the first data and what the mission would have in store for when it starts full operations in about five years. Until then, they can look forward to the next Mercury flyby, which is scheduled to take place next June.

Learn more:
ESA - BepiColombo’s first views of Mercury
UT - BepiColombo Meets Mercury for the First Time on October 1
UT - The First Images and Videos from the Double Venus Flyby
UT - BepiColombo – Mission to Mercury

Lead Image:
Series of images snapped by the BepiColombo orbiter during its first flyby of Mercury, its eventual target, in October 2021.
Credit - ESA

Andy Tomaswick

Andy Tomaswick

Andy has been interested in space exploration ever since reading Pale Blue Dot in middle school. An engineer by training, he likes to focus on the practical challenges of space exploration, whether that's getting rid of perchlorates on Mars or making ultra-smooth mirrors to capture ever clearer data. When not writing or engineering things he can be found entertaining his wife, four children, six cats, and two dogs, or running in circles to stay in shape.