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Credit: JAXA/Hokkaido Univ.). Taken by using Pirka Telescope (1.6 m) of Hokkaido University V-band 10sec exposure each, 70 im
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Credit: Nayoro Observatory, Hokkaido University. BepiColombo_20200419_Pirka
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Credit: KURASHIKI SCIENCE CENTER. BepiColombo-Earth-Flyby2
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Credit: Rikubetsu Space and Science Museum. BepiColombo
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48枚-19h13CreCredit: Yasuo Sano. BepiColombo Earth Flybydit: Yasuo Sano. BepiColombo Earth Flybym46s-19h18m57s-英語-文字入り
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Credit: Yasuo Sano. BepiColombo Earth Flyby
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Credit: T. Oribe @ Saji Observatory. Go Bepicolombo
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Credit: Yuji Tanaka. BepiColombo Flyby
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Credit: Masanori Mizutani. BepiColombo
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Credit: Northolt Branch Observatories. BepiColombo, imaged on the evening of April 11th, using Northolt Branch Observatories' 0.25m f/8 Ritchey-Chretien telescope and QHY42 CMOS camera.
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Credit: Hiroki Fukuyama. BepiColombo
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Credit: Gianluca Masi. Both the images (the Earth by BepiColombo and BepiColombo by the Virtual Telescope on Earth) were taken at the very same time: 10 Apr. 2020, 03:40:32 UTC.
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Credit: KURASHIKI SCIENCE CENTER. BepiColombo-Earth-Flyby-1024x683
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Credit: Sergei Schmalz. BepiColombo observed on April 10, 2020 at the Astronomical Observatory of Castelgrande
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Credit: Northolt Branch Observatories. BepiColombo-with-INSAT-2D "A tale of two spacecraft": As we were observing BepiColombo, we caught a second man-made object passing by. We identify it as an old geostationary satellite.
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Credit: Nick James. bepicolombo_20200411_2150_ndj
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Credit: Cyprien Pouzenc. BepiColombo et (4904) Makio
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Credit: Kenichi Shirakami. Bepi_Colombo_mono_EU-2048x1346
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Credit: Northolt Branch Observatories. BepiColombo-animation-2020-04-11-823x1024
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Credit: Northolt Branch Observatories. We used the observatories' 0.25m Ritchey-Chretien and QHY42 CMOS camera to obtain astrometry on BepiColombo before it left the vicinity of Earth.
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Credit: Kiso Observatory, Tokyo. BepiColombo Earth flyby taken by the wide-field CMOS camera Tomo-e Gozen on 1.0-m Kiso Schmidt telescope.
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Credit: INOUE Takeshi. BepiColombo Earth Flyby. The central objects are Antennae Galaxies,(NGC 4038 / NGC 4039).
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Credit: Sergio Silva. The BepiColombo spacecraft passing through the Blue Horsehead Nebula.
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Credit: Edgar J. Kaiser. First acquisition of Bepi-Colombo's X-band downlink signal after the flyby.
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Alain Maury, Jean Marc Mari and Joaquin Fabrega. BepiColombo Goodbye Flyby.
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Credit: Gianluca Masi - Virtual Telescope Project. BepiColombo is a sharp dot of light, perfectly tracked. This man-made interplanetary traveler is “flying” in front of the stars on the background.