Tag Archives: asteroid

SOFIA provides insights into the metallic characteristics of asteroid Psyche – NASASpaceFlight.com – NASASpaceflight.com

  1. SOFIA provides insights into the metallic characteristics of asteroid Psyche – NASASpaceFlight.com NASASpaceflight.com
  2. NASA to Launch Spacecraft to Observe Metal-rich Asteroid VOA Learning English
  3. This Week @NASA: A Journey to a Metal World, Simulated Mars Mission, Anniversary Celebration SciTechDaily
  4. How to watch NASA’s Psyche mission launch to a metal asteroid this week Digital Trends
  5. NASA’s ‘$10,000 QUADRILLION’ asteroid visit will launch next week: MailOnline’s step-by-step guide to the Psyc Daily Mail
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Our First Asteroid Sample Return Mission is Back on Earth on This Week @NASA – September 29, 2023 – NASA

  1. Our First Asteroid Sample Return Mission is Back on Earth on This Week @NASA – September 29, 2023 NASA
  2. NASA Opens Lid Of Asteroid Sample Capsule, Preserved Proteins Found After Millions Of Years In Dinosaur Feather, And Much More This Week IFLScience
  3. Brian May, best known as Queen’s guitarist, helped NASA return its 1st asteroid sample to Earth USA TODAY
  4. When NASA opened Asteroid Bennu capsule brought back to Earth by Osiris-Rex, THIS is what it found HT Tech
  5. Elation as NASA’s first asteroid samples land on Earth AP Archive
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Potentially hazardous asteroid spotted by NASA, UW scanner in Hawaii – USA TODAY

  1. Potentially hazardous asteroid spotted by NASA, UW scanner in Hawaii USA TODAY
  2. Near-Earth “Potentially Hazardous” Asteroid Discovered: First Triumph for HelioLinc3D Algorithm SciTechDaily
  3. New algorithm spots its first “potentially hazardous” near-Earth asteroid — and it’s 600 feet long CBS News
  4. ‘Potentially hazardous’ 600-foot asteroid detected near Earth after a year of hiding in plain sight Livescience.com
  5. Algorithm designed to identify asteroids discovers potentially hazardous 600-foot object during test run TechSpot
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New algorithm spots its first “potentially hazardous” near-Earth asteroid — and it’s 600 feet long – CBS News

  1. New algorithm spots its first “potentially hazardous” near-Earth asteroid — and it’s 600 feet long CBS News
  2. Near-Earth “Potentially Hazardous” Asteroid Discovered: First Triumph for HelioLinc3D Algorithm SciTechDaily
  3. Groundbreaking Algorithm Successfully Identifies First ‘Potentially Hazardous Asteroid’ The Debrief
  4. Algorithm designed to identify asteroids discovers potentially hazardous 600-foot object during test run TechSpot
  5. New Algorithm Spots ‘Potentially Hazardous’ 600-Foot Asteroid Gizmodo
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Scarlett Johansson on ‘Asteroid City’ and Dream Co-Star She Hasn’t Had Yet: “I’d Love to Work With Tom Cruise” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Scarlett Johansson on ‘Asteroid City’ and Dream Co-Star She Hasn’t Had Yet: “I’d Love to Work With Tom Cruise” Hollywood Reporter
  2. Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost Leave Afterparty of ‘Asteroid City’ Premiere Hand-In-Hand Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Scarlett Johansson’s amazing white dress proves 80s style is back Woman & Home
  4. The Best (and Most Wes Anderson) Looks From the ‘Asteroid City’ Premiere Fashionista
  5. Scarlett Johansson Talks Working With Wes Anderson at ‘Asteroid City’ Premiere The Hollywood Reporter
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Wes Anderson’s ‘Asteroid City’ Charms Cannes With Six-Minute Standing Ovation for Scarlett Johansson as Movie Star Visited by Aliens – Variety

  1. Wes Anderson’s ‘Asteroid City’ Charms Cannes With Six-Minute Standing Ovation for Scarlett Johansson as Movie Star Visited by Aliens Variety
  2. Asteroid City review – Wes Anderson’s 1950s sci-fi is an exhilarating triumph of pure style The Guardian
  3. Everyone’s Starstruck Over Scarlett Johansson in Stellar New Clips from Wes Anderson’s Asteroid City Yahoo Entertainment
  4. ‘Asteroid City’ Review: Wes Anderson’s New Film Is a Piece of 1950s Desert Americana That’s Visually Dazzling and Dramatically Inert Variety
  5. Wes Anderson’s Star-Studded Sci-Fi Asteroid City: New Clips Gizmodo
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‘Asteroid City’ Review: Wes Anderson Has Finally Gone Mad – Vulture

  1. ‘Asteroid City’ Review: Wes Anderson Has Finally Gone Mad Vulture
  2. Everyone’s Starstruck Over Scarlett Johansson in Stellar New Clips from Wes Anderson’s Asteroid City Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Asteroid City review – Wes Anderson’s 1950s sci-fi is an exhilarating triumph of pure style The Guardian
  4. ‘Asteroid City’ Review: Wes Anderson’s Cosmic Grief Comedy Is One of His Very Best Movies Yet IndieWire
  5. ‘Asteroid City’ Review: Wes Anderson’s New Film Is a Piece of 1950s Desert Americana That’s Visually Dazzling and Dramatically Inert Variety
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‘Potentially hazardous’ asteroid that recently zipped past Earth is an elongated weirdo with an odd rotation – Livescience.com

  1. ‘Potentially hazardous’ asteroid that recently zipped past Earth is an elongated weirdo with an odd rotation Livescience.com
  2. Oddly shaped asteroid once considered an impact risk for Earth races past the planet Space.com
  3. Curious ‘Oblong’ Object Detected on Radar Was Closely Tracked by NASA, Officials Say The Debrief
  4. This oblong asteroid will have a close encounter with Earth in 2040 Interesting Engineering
  5. Asteroid Nearly Three Times the Length of Statue of Unity Flew Past Us! | Weather.com The Weather Channel
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Shocking meteor EXPLOSION forced NASA to trigger its asteroid defense-the Chelyabinsk event – HT Tech

  1. Shocking meteor EXPLOSION forced NASA to trigger its asteroid defense-the Chelyabinsk event HT Tech
  2. Experts on the Future of Planetary Defense 10 Years After the Chelyabinsk Asteroid Impact’s 440 Kiloton Explosion SciTechDaily
  3. The 10-year anniversary of the Chelyabinsk meteor: How it impacted RMNB and Evgeny Kuznetsov’s experience Russian Machine Never Breaks
  4. This asteroid actually crashed against Earth and changed space science forever HT Tech
  5. 2013 Chelyabinsk crash: When an asteroid hit Earth and exploded with energy of 35 nuclear bombs India Today
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NASA’s Record-Breaking Lucy Spacecraft Has a New Asteroid Target

Artist’s concept of NASA’s Lucy spacecraft at an asteroid. Credit: NASA

“There are millions of asteroids in the main asteroid belt,” said Raphael Marschall, Lucy collaborator at the Nice Observatory in France, who identified asteroid 1999 VD57 as an object of special interest for Lucy. “I selected 500,000 asteroids with well-defined orbits to see if Lucy might be traveling close enough to get a good look at any of them, even from a distance. This asteroid really stood out. Lucy’s trajectory as originally designed will take it within 40,000 miles of the asteroid, at least three times closer than the next closest asteroid.”

As the NASA Lucy spacecraft travels through the inner edge of the main asteroid belt in the Fall of 2023, the spacecraft will fly by the small, as-of-yet unnamed, asteroid (152830) 1999 VD57. This graphic shows a top-down view of the Solar System indicating the spacecraft’s trajectory shortly before the November 1 encounter. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

The Lucy team realized that, by adding a small maneuver, the spacecraft would be able to get an even closer look at this asteroid. So, on January 24, the team officially added it to Lucy’s tour as an engineering test of the spacecraft’s pioneering terminal tracking system. This new system solves a long-standing problem for flyby missions: during a spacecraft’s approach to an asteroid, it is quite difficult to determine exactly how far the spacecraft is from the asteroid, and exactly which way to point the cameras.

“In the past, most flyby missions have accounted for this uncertainty by taking a lot of images of the region where the asteroid might be, meaning low efficiency and lots of images of blank space,” said Hal Levison, Lucy principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute Boulder, Colorado office. “Lucy will be the first flyby mission to employ this innovative and complex system to automatically track the asteroid during the encounter. This novel system will allow the team to take many more images of the target.”

It turns out that 1999 VD57 provides an excellent opportunity to validate this never-before-flown procedure. The geometry of this encounter—particularly the angle that the spacecraft approaches the asteroid relative to the Sun—is very similar to the mission’s planned Trojan asteroid encounters. This allows the team to carry out a dress rehearsal under similar conditions well in advance of the spacecraft’s main scientific targets.

This asteroid was not identified as a target earlier because it is extremely small. In fact, 1999 VD57, estimated to be a mere 0.4 miles (700 m) in size, will be the smallest main belt asteroid ever visited by a spacecraft. It is much more similar in size to the near-Earth asteroids visited by recent NASA missions OSIRIS-REx and DART than to previously visited main belt asteroids.

The Lucy team will carry out a series of maneuvers starting in early May 2023 to place the spacecraft on a trajectory that will pass approximately 280 miles (450 km) from this small asteroid.

Lucy’s principal investigator is based out of the Boulder, Colorado branch of Southwest Research Institute, headquartered in San Antonio, Texas. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, provides overall mission management, systems engineering, and safety and mission assurance. Lockheed Martin Space in Littleton, Colorado, built the spacecraft. Lucy is the 13th mission in NASA’s Discovery Program. NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Discovery Program for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.



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