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|  |  |  |  | | | News |  | The Moon and Europe - Rosetta OSIRIS images
Rosetta image of the Moon 16 November 2007 As Rosetta closed in on Earth, swung by and then left on its course again, several instruments on the spacecraft were busy taking snaps. As it swung away, the OSIRIS camera also caught glimpses of the Moon. The Moon was imaged with the OSIRIS Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) at 07:36 CET, about nine hours after Rosetta's closest approach to Earth.
 | | | Rosetta’s second Earth swing-by |
OSIRIS has been designed to image faint objects, so a neutral density filter was placed in the optical path to reduce the sensitivity of the camera to one-fiftieth. The above image was acquired through the far-focus red filter of the camera (750 nanometres). The below image of Earth is targeted roughly at Greece. It was taken with the OSIRIS Wide Angle Camera (WAC) during the swing-by. Europe at night, seen with OSIRIS  | | | Europe at night, seen with OSIRIS |
Major urban areas of Europe can be seen illuminated at night. | |
|  | Rosetta Blog ESA's comet chaser Spacecraft Operations Related ESApod Rosetta swing-by update Rosetta Earth swing-byFor the media Media Press KitRosetta 2nd Earth swing-by Q & ARelated articles The Moon and Europe - Rosetta OSIRIS imagesRosetta: OSIRIS’ view of Earth by nightCities at night: Extraordinary Rosetta imagesImages of Earth and Moon captured by RosettaRosetta swing-by a successRosetta right on track for Earth swing-byRosetta closes in on Earth – a second timeBoosting the accuracy of Rosetta's Earth approachRosetta teams up with New HorizonsRosetta delivers Phobos transit animation and 'sees' Mars in stereoRelated links New Norcia - DSA 1OSIRIS
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