Difference between revisions of "433 Eros"
(Added link, images, content.) |
(Added Note.) |
||
Line 61: | Line 61: | ||
==Eros in Orbiter== | ==Eros in Orbiter== | ||
− | Eros appears as a very elongated brown colored object with a few craters and a narrowing near one end near the North Pole. | + | Eros appears as a very elongated brown colored object with a few craters and a narrowing near one end near the North Pole. |
+ | |||
+ | Note that the landing surface as given in the config file is spherical, but the visual of Juno is not, if you land, you will likely be above or below the visual surface. | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center" | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center" |
Revision as of 02:19, 12 September 2024
433 Eros is a small body add-on available in Asteroid Pack 1.00 released in 2004 by Nighthawke and in 3D Asteroids released in 2014 by T1234.
Eros was discovered in 1898 by Carl Gustav Witt at the Berlin Urania Observatory.
Eros in Orbiter
Eros appears as a very elongated brown colored object with a few craters and a narrowing near one end near the North Pole.
Note that the landing surface as given in the config file is spherical, but the visual of Juno is not, if you land, you will likely be above or below the visual surface.
Add-on | Source | Version | Author | Type | Release Date | Compatibility | Wiki article |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Asteroid Pack 1.00 | O-F Resources | 2004-11-21 | Nighthawke | Scenery | 21 November 2004 |
Gallery
433 Eros imaged by the NEAR Shoemaker spacecraft in February 2000
from Wikimedia Commons
edit The Solar System | |
---|---|
Central star |
Sun (Sol) |
Planets |
Mercury - Venus - Earth - Mars - Jupiter - Saturn - Uranus - Neptune |
Natural satellites |
Moon - Phobos - Deimos - Io - Europa - Ganymede - Titan - more... |
Add-ons |
Planets - Dwarf Planets - Small objects - Natural satellites - Alternative star systems |