The Mercury News

NASA spacecraft makes rare dig into asteroid for data.

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. » A NASA spacecraft descended to an asteroid Tuesday and, dodging boulders the size of buildings, momentaril­y touched the surface to collect a handful of cosmic rubble for return to Earth.

It was a first for the United States — only Japan has scored asteroid samples.

“Touchdown declared,” a flight controller announced to cheers and applause. “Sampling is in progress.”

Confirmati­on came from the Osiris-Rex spacecraft as it made contact with the surface of the asteroid Bennu more than 200 million miles away. But it could be a week before scientists know how much, if much of anything, was grabbed and whether another try will be needed. If successful, Osiris-Rex will return the samples in 2023.

“I can’t believe we actually pulled this off,” said lead scientist Dante Lauretta of the University of Arizona. “The spacecraft did everything it was supposed to do.”

Osiris-Rex took 4 1/2 hours to make its way down from its tight orbit around Bennu, following commands sent well in advance by ground controller­s near Denver.

Bennu’s gravity was too low for the spacecraft to land — the asteroid is just 1,670

feet (510 meters) across. As a result, it had to reach out with its 11-foot robot arm and attempt to grab at least 2 ounces.

The University of Arizona’s Heather Enos, deputy scientist for the mission, described it as “kissing the surface with a short touchandgo measured in just seconds.”

At Mission Control for spacecraft builder Lockheed Martin, controller­s on the TAG team — for touchand-go — wore royal blue polo shirts and black masks with the mission patch.

The coronaviru­s pandemic had resulted in a two-month delay.

Tuesday’s operation was considered the most harrowing part of the mission, which began with a launch from Cape Canaveral back in 2016.

A van- sized spacecraft with an Egyptian-inspired name, Osiris-Rex aimed for a spot equivalent to a few parking spaces on Earth in the middle of the asteroid’s Nightingal­e Crater. After nearly two years orbiting the boulder-packed Bennu, the spacecraft found this location to have the biggest patch of particles small enough to be swallowed up.

After determinin­g that the coast was clear, OsirisRex closed in the final few yards (meters) for the sampling.

The spacecraft was programmed to shoot out pressurize­d nitrogen gas to stir up the surface, then suck up any loose pebbles or dust, before backing away.

By the time flight controller­s heard back from OsirisRex, the action already happened 181/2 minutes earlier, the time it takes radio signals to travel each way between Bennu and Earth. They expected to start receiving photos overnight and planned to provide an update Wednesday.

“We’re going to be looking at a whole series of images as we descended down to the surface, made contact, fired that gas bottle, and I really want to know how that surface responded,” Lauretta said. “We haven’t done this before, so this is new territory for us.”

Scientists want at least 2 ounces and, ideally, closer to 4 pounds of Bennu’s black, crumbly, carbon-rich material — thought to contain the building blocks of our solar system.

Pictures taken during the operation will give team members a general idea of the amount of loot; they will put the spacecraft through a series of spins Saturday for a more accurate measure.

 ??  ??
 ?? NASA — UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This photo from August shows the sampling arm of the OsirisRex spacecraft during a rehearsal to try to extract a handful of rubble on the surface of the asteroid Bennu.
NASA — UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS This photo from August shows the sampling arm of the OsirisRex spacecraft during a rehearsal to try to extract a handful of rubble on the surface of the asteroid Bennu.
 ?? NASA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This undated image made available by NASA shows the asteroid Bennu from the Osiris-Rex spacecraft. Scientists want at least 2 ounces and, ideally, closer to 4 pounds of Bennu’s black, crumbly, carbon-rich material.
NASA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS This undated image made available by NASA shows the asteroid Bennu from the Osiris-Rex spacecraft. Scientists want at least 2 ounces and, ideally, closer to 4 pounds of Bennu’s black, crumbly, carbon-rich material.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States