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Messenger reveals Mercury's dark side
New pictures of our solar system's smallest planet have been graciously provided by the Messenger probe. No one's seen this side of Mercury before--formerly we'd only seen its party piece.
A large version of the NASA photo can be viewed here.
NASA's Messenger has beamed back the first picture of Mercury's hitherto unseen side, snapped from a distance of about 17,000 miles after its first fly-by of the planet yesterday.NASA explains: "The image shows features as small as six miles in size. Similar to previously mapped portions of Mercury, this hemisphere appears heavily cratered. It also reveals some unique and distinctive features. On the upper right is the giant Caloris basin, including its western portions never before seen by spacecraft. Formed by the impact of a large asteroid or comet, Caloris is one of the largest, and perhaps one of the youngest basins in the solar system."
Messenger will make two further fly-bys of Mercury before orbital insertion in 2011, after which it will deploy its impressive payload of instruments to probe the body's mysteries.
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Edmund Jenks
Los Angeles, California, United States

![Planetary triple play on deck [early] Sunday Planetary triple play on deck [early] Sunday](http://media.nowpublic.net/images/84/2/842ee3b8fc5a95d73560964a0402d72a.jpg)


Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 09:47 on January 16th, 2008
It's amazing how we could be living with these planets for so long, and only seeing their other halves now. It's like finding out that your partner snores after ten years of marriage.
at 12:43 on January 16th, 2008
Rob Peters, I love this stuff! I remember watching TV "Neptune all night" I learn so much from stories like this. Thanks