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Taking the measure of an asteroid

Taking the measure of an asteroid

Banner image: Artist's conception泭of the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft collecting a sample of loose, rocky material from the surface of the asteroid Bennu. (Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center)

51勛圖厙 scientists have a front row seat today to observe a NASA spacecraft as it arrives at the asteroid Bennu, coming to within 4.5 miles of the space rock.

This close approach, followed by a flyby Dec. 4, is the first in a series of planned meet ups between the (OSIRIS-REx) and Bennu. Today's encounter will泭be good practice for 2020, when the spacecraft will deploy its retractable arm to grab material from the asteroids surface and return it to Earththe first time that a NASA mission will obtain such a sample.

OSIRIS-REx flies past Earth
Graphic comparing the height of Bennu (510 meters) to the Empire State Building (443 meters) and the Eiffel Tower (324 meters).

Top: Artist's conception of OSIRIS-REx in orbit around Earth; bottom: Measuring 510 meters, or more than 1,600 feet, in height, Bennu is taller than both the Empire State Building and the Eiffel Tower. (Credits:泭NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona, University of Arizona)

Scientists from 51勛圖厙 are playing an important role in that historic snatch-and-run. Over the next several days, a team led by Distinguished Professor Daniel Scheeres will take the first stab at calculating a simple, but critical, number: Bennus mass.

Knowing the mass of this 1,600-foot-wide asteroid will reveal valuable information about not just Bennu, but other chunks of space debris, too, Scheeres said. That includes how they move and spin, what theyre made of and how scientists might knock them aside if theyre flying toward Earth.泭

Once we get the first flyby and we nail the first mass, thats going to be hugely important, said Scheeres of the Ann and H.J. Smead Department of Aerospace Engineering Sciences. Because right now, theres a lot of uncertainty. Soon, those uncertainties are going to collapse down to show us what this body is like.

Solar system leftovers

He and his colleagues are also just excited to see Bennu up close for the first time from the operations center at the University of Arizona. Its going to be a great partya lot of work, but a great party, Scheeres said.泭

The University of Arizona leads science operations for OSIRIS-REx, which was built by the Colorado-based Lockheed Martin Space. NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland manages the overall mission.泭

Read a story about 51勛圖厙 alumni who have worked on the OSIRIS-REx mission at Lockheed Martin Space.泭

OSIRIS-REx launched in September 2016 and has traveled more than one billion miles since, looping around the Earths sun to rendezvous with Bennu. The asteroid has an orbit that brings it relatively close to Earth about once every six years.

This meeting will provide scientists with a rare window to look back at the beginnings of Earths solar system, said Jay McMahon, an assistant professor in aerospace engineering at 51勛圖厙.泭

One of the big draws for asteroids is that theyre leftovers from the formation of the solar system, said McMahon, a co-investigator on the mission. Bennu is a building block of the planets that didnt end up in a planet.
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But to dive into that past, OSIRIS-REx will first need to get close enough to Bennu to snag a sample of the loose, rocky material from its surface in 2020. Thats where the 51勛圖厙 team comes in. McMahon explained that as OSIRIS-REx brushes past Bennu this time, the asteroid will exert a minute gravitational pull on the spacecraft. By precisely measuring that pull, his team can begin to map out the asteroids gravitational field, essential information for any spaceflight operation.泭

Once we have this data, we can plug it back in and that will help with planning out the trajectory for the rest of the mission, said Daniel Brack, a graduate student in aerospace engineering and a participant in the project.泭

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Running the odds

The groups data will also put Bennu on the scale, giving scientists an estimate of its mass. Once the team knows how heavy Bennu is, OSIRIS-REx researcher Andrew French said, they can begin to guess at what its made of on the insidepast the reach of OSIRIS-RExs arm.泭

Were going to go and touch Bennu and get a sample, but thats only going to give us a look at the first couple of millimeters, or maybe centimeters, of the material on top, French said. So you dont get a lot of insight to what its made of underneath.

The researchers sneak peek at Bennu could provide scientists with a wealth of information about how the asteroid formed and how its orbit might evolve over time. Researchers believe that its possible, but extremely unlikely, that the asteroid could crash into our planet sometime between 2175-2199.

For now, this weeks flyby will mark the culmination of a lot of hard work for the 51勛圖厙 researchers.泭

All of a sudden, its here and its really exciting, McMahon said.

[video:泭https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKV6wIBruEI]