In News
- Recently, NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) successfully crashed into Dimorphous.
About
- Humanity’s first planetary defence test:
- With the collision, the test has been completed successfully in a mission that went exactly as planned without any hitches.
- Reason for test:
- The impact should have nudged the asteroid slightly and subtly changed its orbit around Didymos, the larger asteroid.
- Telescopes on Earth and in space are going to take measurements of this change to see how the change measures up to computer-generated simulations.
- Why Dimorphos?
- Didymos is a perfect system for the test mission because it is an eclipsing binary which means it has a moonlet that regularly orbits the asteroid and it can be seen when it passes in front of the main asteroid.
- The Didymos system is not an Earth-crossing asteroid, and there is no possibility that the deflection experiment could create an impact hazard.
- Earth-based telescopes can study this variation in brightness to understand how long it takes Dimorphos to orbit Didymos.
About the DART Mission
- It is a planetary defence-driven test of technologies for preventing an impact on Earth by a hazardous asteroid.
- Objectives:
- DART is the first technology demonstration of the kinetic impactor technique that could be used to mitigate the threat of an asteroid hitting Earth.
- The kinetic impactor mitigation technique is the impulsive deflection of the asteroid through the sudden addition of momentum. In simpler terms, DART is being sent to collide with an asteroid to change its orbital period.
Image Courtesy: Scientificamerican
Follow-up mission: Hera
- The European Space Agency is developing Hera, a spacecraft that will be launched to Didymos in 2024 and arrive in 2027 (5 years after DART’s impact), to do a detailed reconnaissance and assessment.
Asteroids
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Source: IE
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