Folks, we're off to slam into an asteroid.
For the first time ever, NASA launched an almost year-long test for deflecting an asteroid on Wednesday, the first planetary defence method of its kind.
Launched at 1:21 a.m. ET, Nov. 24 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, NASA's DART mission will intentionally collide with an asteroid to change its orbit. As Mashable’s Mark Kaufman perfectly put it, they will "slam a spacecraft the size of a vending machine into a space rock the size of a great Egyptian pyramid."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The DART mission (or Double Asteroid Redirection Test) was built by the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, and is meant to protect Earth from potential asteroid or comet impacts (though NASA is not currently tracking any, so don't freak out just yet).
DART’s target is the asteroid system Didymos, specifically a 530-foot-wide (160-metre) moonlet. The system is hanging out near Earth but isn't a threat, so has been picked for a safe test.
At 2:17 a.m. ET, DART separated from the second stage of the rocket, and mission operators received the first transmission of data, then started to move the spacecraft to a safe spot to deploy its solar arrays.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
And it did! It took about two hours, but the spacecraft unfurled its 28-foot-long solar arrays, which will power the craft and NASA's awesomely named evolutionary xenon thruster — a commercial ion engine, and one of a bunch of tech that's being tested on this mission for future use.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
You're not going to see any asteroid collisions for a while — it'll take almost a year. The spacecraft will catch up with Didymos between Sept. 26 and Oct. 1, 2022, and then intentionally body slam it at about 4 miles per second (6 kilometres per second). According to NASA, this impact will cut short the asteroid's orbit by minutes. After the impact, the asteroid's changes will be studied and used in future models to determine how effective this method is at averting potential asteroid collisions with Earth.
You can watch the whole launch here if you're keen:
"DART is turning science fiction into science fact and is a testament to NASA’s proactivity and innovation for the benefit of all," said NASA administrator Bill Nelson in a press statement on Wednesday. "In addition to all the ways NASA studies our universe and our home planet, we're also working to protect that home, and this test will help prove out one viable way to protect our planet from a hazardous asteroid should one ever be discovered that is headed toward Earth."
He's right. Here's why the test is crucial for humanity.
If you want to track the DART mission yourself, follow @NASA, @AsteroidWatch, and @JHUAPL as it travels to Dimorphos.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
NASA successfully launches mission to slam into an asteroid-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
7626
浏览
9
获赞
872
21 Years of Hitman: How Stealth Action Got Perfected Over the Last 2 Decades
Coming off the highly anticipated release of Hitman 3, this latest installment has been very well reSpaceX Crew Dragon brings four astronauts home in nighttime splashdown
While most of the U.S. was sleeping on Saturday night into Sunday morning, four astronauts aboard thSouth Korea blocks DeepSeek access, citing privacy laws
South Korea is the latest governing body to restrict the Chinese company DeepSeek based on the compaHow to translate a message in Instagram DMs
If you've ever gotten a direct message on Instagram in a language you don't speak very well, it canEverything you need to know about the OLED display rumored to be on the iPhone 12
In a normal year, Apple shows off its new line of iPhones in September. 2020 has been anything but nBest Apple deal: Save $30 on Apple Pencil Pro
SAVE $30:As of March 3, the Apple Pencil Pro is on sale for $99 at Amazon. That's a 23% saving on thBest laptop deal: Save 48% on the Samsung Galaxy Book4 Pro at Amazon
SAVE $645.38:As of Feb. 18, get the Samsung Galaxy Book4 Pro (Intel Core 5 Ultra, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSSpaceX Crew Dragon brings four astronauts home in nighttime splashdown
While most of the U.S. was sleeping on Saturday night into Sunday morning, four astronauts aboard thApple will reveal HomePod mini for $99, reliable leaker says
Apple will release a new HomePod at its big event on Tuesday, a new rumor suggests. And this one couDual Booting: Windows and Ubuntu
Dual booting is a great way to get the best of both worlds of Windows and Linux. It’s relatively strBest Amazon deals of the day: Apple AirTags, Sonos Roam 2, JBL Live 770NC, Fire 7 tablet, Sonos Ray
Check out the best Amazon deals of the day as of March 12: OUR TOP PICKBest earbuds deal: Get Amazon Echo Buds for just $55 at Amazon
SAVE $85:As of Feb. 6, get the Amazon Echo Buds for $54.99, down from their usual price of $139.99,David Harbour recreated THAT scene from 'The Shining' and it's frankly terrifying
All work and no play makes David Harbour the terrifying star of his own version of The Shining.The SPC Games That Weren't Cancelled, But Should Have Been
Although some decent games do poorly for no good reason, many titles are so headscratchingly bad thaGoogle had to change its Super Bowl commercial because AI got something wrong
We're expecting to see multiple AI-related commercials during Super Bowl LIX this weekend, but at le