National Post

Asteroid samples spilling from NASA probe

‘We’re almost the victim of our own success’

- Joey Roulett e

WASHINGTON • The U. S. probe that collected a sample from an asteroid earlier this week retrieved so much material that a rock is wedged in the container door, allowing rocks to spill back out into space, NASA officials said on Friday.

The robotic arm of the probe, OSIRIS- REX, on Tuesday night kicked up a debris cloud of rocks on Bennu, a skyscraper- sized asteroid some 320 million kilometres from Earth and trapped the material in a collection device for the return to Earth.

But images of the spacecraft’s col lection head beamed back to ground control revealed it had caught more material than scientists anticipate­d and was spewing an excess of flaky asteroid rocks into space.

The leakage had the OSIRIS- REX mission team scrambling to stow the collection device to prevent additional spillage.

“Time is of the essence,” Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’S associate administra­tor for science, told reporters.

Zurbuchen said mission teams will skip their chance to measure how much material they collected as originally planned and proceed to the stow phase, a fragile process of tucking the sample collection container in a safe position within the spacecraft without jostling out more valuable material.

NASA will not know how much material it collected until the sample capsule returns in 2023. The troublesho­oting also led mission leaders to forgo any more chances of redoing a collection attempt and instead commit to begin the spacecraft’s return to Earth next March.

“Quite honestly, we could not have performed a better collection experiment,” OSIRIS-REX principle investigat­or Dante Lauretta told reporters, affirming a hearty sample size.

But with the door lodged open by a rock and the “concerning” images of sample spillage, “we’re almost the victim of our own success here,” he added.

The roughly US$ 800 million, minivan- sized OSIRIS-RE x spacecraft, built by Lockheed Martin, launched in 2016 to grab and return the first U. S. sample of pristine asteroid materials. Japan is the only other country to have accomplish­ed such a feat.

 ?? HANDOUT / NASA TV / AFP via Gett y Imag es ?? NASA’S robotic arm from spacecraft OSIRIS-REX makes contact with asteroid Bennu to collect samples
320 kilometres from Earth last week.
HANDOUT / NASA TV / AFP via Gett y Imag es NASA’S robotic arm from spacecraft OSIRIS-REX makes contact with asteroid Bennu to collect samples 320 kilometres from Earth last week.

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