NASA has intentionally slammed a spacecraft into an asteroid in the first ever test of Earth’s planetary defense system.
NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft smashed into the asteroid Dimorphos at 7:14 p.m. ET on Monday (Sept. 26) in humanity’s first attempt to alter an asteroid’s trajectory. NASA believes the impact will be a vital demonstration of how humans could one day nudge a dangerous asteroid away from a catastrophic collision course with our planet.
The 1,210-pound (550 kilograms) DART craft — a squat, cube-shaped probe consisting of sensors, an antenna, an ion thruster and two 28-foot-long (8.5 meters) solar arrays — made a direct hit with the 525-feet-wide (160 m) asteroid Dimorphos while traveling at roughly 13,420 mph (21,160 km/h) and dramatically disintegrated upon impact.
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“Now is when the science starts, now that we’ve impacted. Now we’re going to see how effective we were,” Lori Glaze, Planetary Science Division Director at NASA, said in a live webcast of the event.
The probe’s goal was to slow the orbit of Dimorphos around its larger partner — the 1,280-feet-wide (390 m) asteroid Didymos. NASA will deem the mission a success if Dimorphos’s 12-hour orbit slows by 73 seconds, but the real change could be by as much as 10 minutes. Neither asteroid poses a threat to Earth. Data that will pour in for weeks to come will tell us how successful that mission was, said Nancy Chabot, Coordination Lead for the DART mission, in a live webcast of the event.
To arrive at the twin asteroids, DART undertook a 10-month, 7 million-mile (11 million kilometers) journey from its launchpad at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, where it was launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket.
DART’s final moments were captured by its onboard Didymos Reconnaissance and Asteroid Camera for Optical Navigation (DRACO), which automatically steered the spacecraft into its collision course with the distant asteroid. NASA scientists said that Dimorphos wasn’t even visible to DART’s DRACO camera system until it was within one hour of impact, after which it became just one pixel in the camera’s field of view. Three minutes prior to impact, the asteroid grew to just 42 pixels in size. As the craft approached Dimorphos, the rough terrain and shadowy boulders became bigger and bigger before the image blanked out.
The spacecraft’s camera then…
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