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  2. Impact events on Jupiter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_events_on_Jupiter

    Although the impacts took place on the side of Jupiter hidden from Earth, Galileo, then at a distance of 1.6 AU (240 million km; 150 million mi) from the planet, was able to see the impacts as they occurred. Jupiter's rapid rotation brought the impact sites into view for terrestrial observers a few minutes after the collisions. [34]

  3. Impact event - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_event

    The sky in the region was very overcast, so only an airborne observation team was able to successfully observe it falling above the clouds. It is now thought to be a remnant of the Lunar Prospector mission in 1998, and is the third time any previously unknown object – natural or artificial – was identified prior to impact.

  4. List of spacecraft intentionally crashed into ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_spacecraft...

    The crash landing sites themselves are of interest to space archeology. Luna 1 , not itself a lunar orbiter, was the first spacecraft designed as an impactor . It failed to hit the Moon in 1959, however, thus inadvertently becoming the first man-made object to leave geocentric orbit and enter a heliocentric orbit , where it remains.

  5. Asteroids safely fly by Earth all the time. Here’s why ...

    www.aol.com/asteroids-safely-fly-earth-time...

    The exercise was organized by the U.S. space agency's Planetary Defense Coordination Office, which was established in 2016 to catalog near-Earth objects that could crash into the planet.

  6. Mars and Jupiter get chummy in the night sky. The ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/mars-jupiter-chummy-night-sky...

    Mars and Jupiter are cozying up in the night sky for their closest rendezvous this decade. In reality, our solar system’s biggest planet and its dimmer, reddish neighbor will be more than 350 ...

  7. 2009 Jupiter impact event - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Jupiter_impact_event

    The 2009 Jupiter impact event, occasionally referred to as the Wesley impact, was a July 2009 impact event on Jupiter that caused a black spot in the planet's atmosphere. The impact area covered 190 million square kilometers, similar in area to the planet's Little Red Spot and approximately the size of the Pacific Ocean . [ 3 ]

  8. Why is a NASA spacecraft crashing into an asteroid? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/explainer-why-nasa-spacecraft...

    In the first-of-its kind, save-the-world experiment, NASA is about to clobber a small, harmless asteroid millions of miles away. A spacecraft named Dart will zero in on the asteroid Monday, intent ...

  9. Comet Shoemaker–Levy 9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet_Shoemaker–Levy_9

    Brian G. Marsden of the Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams noted that the comet lay only about 4 degrees from Jupiter as seen from Earth, and that although this could be a line-of-sight effect, its apparent motion in the sky suggested that the comet was physically close to the planet.