November 23, 2024

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NASA is making final preparations to crash a spacecraft and turn it into an asteroid

NASA is making final preparations to crash a spacecraft and turn it into an asteroid

NASA is making final preparations to crash a spacecraft into asteroid In the world’s first planetary defense test.

The Expedition It’s called the Double Asteroid Redirection Test, or DART. The DART spacecraft was launched on its journey to the asteroid last November. On September 26, it will aim to hit the asteroid to see how the collision affects the trajectory of the space object.

The test is designed to demonstrate a possible way to change the direction of asteroids that are considered threats to Earth.

The mission target will be an asteroid called Demorphos, which is part of the two-body asteroid system. Demorphos is a “little moon” orbiting a larger asteroid called Didymos. Didymus is about 780 meters wide, while Demorphos is 160 meters wide.

This image shows light from the asteroid Didymos and the moon Demorphos orbits. It’s a combination of 243 images taken by the Didimos Reconnaissance Camera and the Asteroid Camera for Optical Navigation (Draco) on July 27, 2022. (Image credits: NASA JPL DART Navigation Team)

The asteroid system poses no danger to Earth. But NASA says it’s being targeted as a more efficient way to test the method of impact rather than hitting a single asteroid flying in space.

The goal of the DART mission is to find out how the crash of the spacecraft will redirect the asteroid’s path and speed. The collapse will occur about 11 million kilometers from Earth.

Currently, Dimorphos complete one orbit around Didymos every 11 hours 55 minutes. The distance between the two asteroid centers is 1.18 kilometers. The DART spacecraft will aim to strike Dimorphos almost head-on. When this happens, it will shorten the time it takes the tiny asteroid to orbit Didymos by several minutes, NASA explain.

Telescopes on Earth will measure the change in the orbital period.

NASA engineers said they hope to change at least 73 seconds for the mission to be considered a success.

DART team members carefully inspect the spacecraft prior to vibration tests in July 2021 (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

DART team members carefully inspect the spacecraft prior to vibration tests in July 2021 (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

Earlier this month, NASA announce The DART spacecraft got its first look at the asteroid system. A series of images were captured on July 27 by an imaging device on the spacecraft. The images showed the light emitted by the Didymus system.

NASA said that at the time the images were taken, the spacecraft was about 32 million kilometers from the two asteroids. This made it difficult to see much of the Didymus system. But after merging and scanning the images, the team was able to improve and select the image quality your location.

Elena Adams is a DART mission systems engineer at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland. She said, “This first set of images is used as a test to prove our images Technologies. Adams added that it will be the imaging instrument that will guide the DART spacecraft to its asteroid target.

DART team members install and inspect the DART spacecraft's only instrument - the Didymos Reconnaissance Camera and Asteroid Navigation Camera (DRACO) - on the spacecraft in June 2021 (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

DART team members install and inspect the DART spacecraft’s only instrument – the Didymos Reconnaissance Camera and Asteroid Navigation Camera (DRACO) – on the spacecraft in June 2021 (Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

In the final hours before the crash, the spacecraft will need to see and process images of the asteroid system as it spontaneously travels to the target without human intervention, according to NASA. He said.

The DART process will be captured in images captured by CubeSat. CubeSats are a small research spacecraft also known as nanosatellites.

DART team members from the Johns Hopkins Laboratory of Applied Physics in Maryland and the Italian Space Agency carefully positioned the LICIACube on the DART spacecraft.  (Image credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

DART team members from the Johns Hopkins Laboratory of Applied Physics in Maryland and the Italian Space Agency carefully positioned the LICIACube on the DART spacecraft. (Image credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

The 14-kilogram CubeSat that will take the photos is called the LICIACube. It is a project of the Italian Space Agency. It was designed and built by the Italian aerospace engineering company Argotec. LICIACube is set to deploy from the spacecraft about 10 days before the crash.

LICIACube is equipped with two separate cameras. It is designed to collect scientific data and inform the CubeSat self-guidance system. Cameras will constantly capture the asteroid crash as well as the effects from the process.

DART team engineers raised and examined the LICIACube CubeSat after it arrived at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, in August.  The mini-satellite will be deployed 10 days before the DART asteroid strike.  (Image credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

DART team engineers raised and examined the LICIACube CubeSat after it arrived at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, in August. The mini-satellite will be deployed 10 days before the DART asteroid strike. (Image credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ed Whitman)

Elisabetta Dotto is a member of the LICIACube science team at the National Institute of Astrophysics in Rome. She and other scientists said in a statement.Careful“To receive and examine the images captured by the CubeSat.” It would be interesting to study, for the first time, the nature and structure of such a amazing Objects like Binary [near-Earth asteroids]. “

I’m Brian Lynn.

Bryan Lynn wrote this story for VOA Learning English, based on reports from NASA and the Associated Press.

Test – NASA is making final preparations to crash a spacecraft into an asteroid

Test - NASA is making final preparations to crash a spacecraft into an asteroid

Start the quiz to find out the answer

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The words in this story

asteroid n. A rocky body that revolves around the sun like a planet

Expedition n. The flight of an aircraft or spacecraft to perform a specific task

your location n. The place where something happens

Technique n. method

Careful characteristic Wanting to do something a lot

amazing characteristic very strange or strange

Binary characteristic related to two things

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