Oman Daily Observer

Touchdown! Japan space probe lands new robot on asteroid

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TOKYO: A Japanese probe landed a new observatio­n robot on an asteroid on Wednesday as it pursues a mission to shed light on the origins of the solar system.

The French-german Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout, or MASCOT, launched from the Hayabusa2 probe, landed safely on Ryugu and was in contact with its team, the lander’s official Twitter account said.

“And then I found myself in a place like no place on Earth. A land full of wonder, mystery and danger!,” the @ MASCOT2018 account tweeted. “I landed on asteroid Ryugu!” MASCOT is expected to collect a wide range of data on the asteroid, some 300 million kilometres (190 million miles) from Earth.

“It is hugely significan­t to take data from the surface of an asteroid, we have high expectatio­ns for the scientific data,” Hayabusa2 mission manager Makoto Yoshikawa at the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency (JAXA) told a briefing before the landing.

The 10-kilogram box-shaped MASCOT is loaded with sensors. It can take images at multiple wavelength­s, investigat­e minerals with a microscope, gauge surface temperatur­es and measure magnetic fields.

MASCOT’S launch comes 10 days after the Hayabusa2 dropped a pair of MINERVA-II micro-rovers on the Ryugu asteroid.

It was the first time that moving, robotic observatio­n devices have been successful­ly landed on an asteroid.

The rovers will take advantage of Ryugu’s low gravity to jump around on the surface — travelling as far as 15 metres and staying above the surface for as long as 15 minutes — to survey the asteroid’s physical features with cameras and sensors.

Unlike those machines, MASCOT will be largely immobile — it will “jump” just once on its mission, and it can turn on its sides.

And while the rovers will spend several months on the asteroid, the MASCOT has a maximum battery life of just 16 hours, and will transmit the data it collects to the Hayabusa2 before running out of juice.

The Hayabusa2 is scheduled later this month to deploy an “impactor” that will explode above the asteroid, shooting a two-kilo copper object into it to blast a small crater on the surface.

The probe will then hover over the artificial crater and collect samples using an extended arm.

The samples of “fresh” materials, unexposed to millennia of wind and radiation, could help answer some fundamenta­l questions about life and the universe, including whether elements from space helped give rise to life on Earth.

Part of MASCOT’S mission is to collect data that will help determine where the crater should be created.

Hayabusa2, about the size of a large fridge and equipped with solar panels, is the successor to JAXA’S first asteroid explorer, Hayabusa — Japanese for falcon.

MASCOT IS EXPECTED TO COLLECT A WIDE RANGE OF DATA ON THE ASTEROID, SOME 300 MILLION KILOMETRES FROM EARTH

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