NASA to Launch Asteroid-Sampling Mission in 3 Weeks: VIDEO


NASA to Launch Asteroid-Sampling Mission in 3 Weeks

By Mike Wall, Space.com Senior Writer | August 17, 201

Artist's illustration of NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft grabbing a sample from the asteroid Bennu.

Credit: NASA


Liftoff for NASA's first-ever asteroid-sampling mission is just three weeks away.


The agency's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is scheduled to launch atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket on Sept. 8 from Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. If all goes according to plan, the probe will return a pristine sample of the potentially hazardous space rock Bennu to Earth in September 2023.


"We seek samples that date back to the very dawn of our solar system," OSIRIS-REx principal investigator Dante Lauretta, a professor of planetary science and cosmochemistry at the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, said during a news conference today (Aug. 17). [OSIRIS-REx: NASA's Asteroid Sample-Return Mission in Pictures]


"We want to get those back into our laboratories to understand the processes that may have led to the origin of life, and to the habitability of our planet," Lauretta added.


NASA is sending a probe to the asteroid Bennu to collect samples from the space rock and return them to Earth. <a href="http://www.space.com/11808-nasa-asteroid-mission-osiris-rex-1999-rq36-infographic.html">See how NASA's OSIRIS-REx mission to collect samples of the asteroid 1999 RQ36 will happen in this Space.com infographic</a>.


OSIRIS-REx will take a circuitous path toward Bennu, finally meeting up with the 1,600-foot-wide (500 meters) space rock in August 2018.


The spacecraft will study Bennu from orbit for about two years. Then, in July 2020 or so, it will head down and grab at least 2 ounces (60 grams) of asteroid material.


"We don't technically land on Bennu, but we make contact with it for about 5 seconds," Jeff Grossman, OSIRIS-REx program scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C., said during today's news conference.


During these 5 seconds, the probe will blast the asteroid's surface with gas and collect the material that's blown out, Grossman explained.


Current plans call for OSIRIS-REx to leave Bennu for Earth in March 2021. In September 2023, the spacecraft will eject the sample capsule, which will land with the aid of parachutes in the Utah desert. (OSIRIS-REx, meanwhile, will be put in a stable "parking orbit" around the sun.)


The asteroid material will be studied for years to come by scientists around the world, much as the moon rocks returned by NASA's Apollo astronauts have been analyzed, Lauretta said.


"Sample return is the gift that keeps on giving," he said.


Though OSIRIS-REx is NASA's first asteroid-sampling mission, it isn't the first one in history: Japan's Hayabusa probe sent home tiny pieces of the space rock Itokawa in 2010. (And Hayabusa 2 launched in December 2014 to collect material from another asteroid, known as Ryugu.)

http://www.space.com/33774-nasa-osiris-rex-asteroid-mission-launching-soon.html

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