San Francisco Chronicle

Spacecraft drops device onto Ryugu asteroid

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO — A GermanFren­ch observatio­n device safely landed on an asteroid on Wednesday after a Japanese spacecraft released it as part of a research effort that could find clues about the origin of the solar system, Japanese space officials said.

The Japan Space Exploratio­n Agency said the Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout, or MASCOT, was released from the unmanned spacecraft Hayabusa2 and successful­ly landed on the asteroid Ryugu.

The spacecraft went as close as about 160 feet to the asteroid’s surface to release the box-shaped lander. Hayabusa2 has been stationed near the asteroid since June after traveling 170 million miles from Earth.

About an hour after the separation, the space agency, known as JAXA, said it had received signals from MASCOT, an indication of its safe landing.

JAXA’s Hayabusa project manager, Yuichi Tsuda, confirmed the landing at a news conference. JAXA collaborat­ed with the German Aerospace Center and France’s Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales in the MASCOT project.

The lander’s deployment follows the successful landing last month of two MINERVAII1 observatio­n rovers that have transmitte­d a series of images showing the asteroid’s rocky surface.

Hayabusa2 dropped MASCOT on the opposite hemisphere from the rovers so they don’t interfere with each other’s activity, JAXA said.

It took more than three years for the Hayabusa2 spacecraft to reach the asteroid’s vicinity. Hayabusa2 will later attempt to briefly land on the asteroid itself to collect samples to send back to researcher­s on Earth.

The two successful landings of the probes provide a boost of confidence ahead of the upcoming landing of Hayabusa2, though that will be a greater challenge, Tsuda said.

The lithium batteryrun MASCOT can operate 16 hours — while the asteroid revolves twice — to collect and transmit data, including temperatur­e and mineral varieties. After its observatio­n activity at the initial landing spot, it will bounce to a second location to collect another set of samples there.

 ?? Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency ?? Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa2 (center left) hovers over asteroid Ryugu, 170 million miles from Earth.
Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa2 (center left) hovers over asteroid Ryugu, 170 million miles from Earth.

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