• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Physics Everywhere

Physics Everywhere

Learn Physics Easy Way

  • Cosmos
  • News
  • Earth
  • Concep of Physics

Asteroid samples tucked into capsule for return to Earth

October 29, 2020 by irfanguru Leave a Comment


In this undated image provided by NASA, a sample container hovers over a capsule on the Osiris-Rex spacecraft near the asteroid Bennu. The capsule will eventually return to Earth with rubble collected in the container on Oct. 20, 2020, from the asteroid’s surface. (NASA via AP)

A NASA spacecraft more than 200 million miles away has tucked asteroid samples into a capsule for return to Earth, after losing some of its precious loot, scientists said Thursday.

Flight controllers moved up the crucial operation after some of the collected rubble spilled into space last week.

The Osiris-Rex spacecraft gathered pebbles and other pieces of asteroid Bennu on Oct. 20, briefly touching the surface with its robot arm and sucking up whatever was there. So much was collected—an estimated hundreds of grams’ worth—that rocks got wedged in the rim of the container and jammed it open, allowing some samples to escape.

Whatever is left won’t depart Bennu’s neighborhood until March, when the asteroid and Earth are properly aligned. It will be 2023—seven years after Osiris-Rex rocketed from Cape Canaveral—before the samples arrive here.

This is the first U.S. mission to go after asteroid samples. Japan has done it twice at other space rocks and expects its latest batch to arrive in December.

Rich in carbon, the solar-orbiting Bennu is believed to hold the preserved building blocks of the solar system. Scientists said the remnants can help explain how our solar system’s planets formed billions of years ago and how life on Earth came to be. The samples also can help improve our odds, they said, if a doomsday rock heads our way.

Bennu—a black, roundish rock bigger than New York’s Empire State Building—could come dangerously close to Earth late in the next decade. The odds of a strike are 1-in-2,700. The good news is that while packing a punch, it won’t wipe out the home planet.


Asteroid samples escaping from jammed NASA spacecraft


© 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Citation:
Asteroid samples tucked into capsule for return to Earth (2020, October 29)
retrieved 29 October 2020
from https://phys.org/news/2020-10-asteroid-samples-tucked-capsule-earth.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





Source link

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Primary Sidebar

More to See

NASA’s new Mars rover hits dusty red road, 1st trip 21 feet

March 6, 2021 By irfanguru

Study marks major milestone for Louisiana coastal plan

March 6, 2021 By irfanguru

Quake-ravaged part of Croatia sees gaping sinkholes emerge

March 5, 2021 By irfanguru

How do forests function in persistent organic pollutant cycling?

March 5, 2021 By irfanguru

Southwest Iceland is shaking – and may be about to erupt

March 5, 2021 By irfanguru

Recent Posts

  • Etna keeps up its spectacular explosions; ash rains on towns
  • Study marks major milestone for Louisiana coastal plan
  • NASA’s new Mars rover hits dusty red road, 1st trip 21 feet
  • Small volcanic lakes tapping giant underground reservoirs
  • Coastal changes worsen nuisance flooding on many US shorelines, study finds
  • Comet Catalina suggests comets delivered carbon to rocky planets
  • Making sense of commotion under the ocean to locate tremors near deep-sea faults
  • Sixth mirror cast for Giant Magellan Telescope
  • New tool finds and fingerprints previously undetected PFAS compounds in watersheds on Cape Cod
  • Earth’s position and orbit spurred ancient marine life extinction

Footer

Categories

  • Cosmos
  • News
  • Earth
  • Concep of Physics

Recent

  • Etna keeps up its spectacular explosions; ash rains on towns
  • Study marks major milestone for Louisiana coastal plan
  • NASA’s new Mars rover hits dusty red road, 1st trip 21 feet
  • Small volcanic lakes tapping giant underground reservoirs
  • Coastal changes worsen nuisance flooding on many US shorelines, study finds

Search

Affiliate Links

  • Become An Affiliate of Edugram
  • Edugram Assignments
  • Edugram Writer

Copyright © 2021 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Go to mobile version