• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

“We Have Impact”: NASA’s DART Mission Scores A Direct Hit On Asteroid Dimorphos

September 27, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) has proven one thing – we have the capability to slam a spacecraft at high speed into a Great Pyramid-sized rock 11 million kilometers (7 million miles) from Earth. In the process, we got some excellent images of the jumble of rocks that make up the surface of Dimorphos, as well as some taken of the larger asteroid Didymos on the way past. 

However, it could take days or weeks to learn how much the collision changed Dimorphos’ orbit around its companion, and therefore what it would take to redirect future threats.

Advertisement

Since scientists became confident an asteroid was responsible for the Earth’s last mass extinction event, an obvious question has been: how can we avoid a repeat? In reality, we are unlikely to face a threat such as the one presented in films like Deep Impact, Armageddon, or Don’t Look Up any time soon. However, encounters with smaller rocks are much more common, and could easily kill millions. DART is about establishing planetary defenses against such dangers.

In the meantime, the footage it sent back gave us all a taste of what it is like to head for a lump or rock at 6.6 kilometers (4.1 miles) per second in a vehicle the size of a small car.

“At its core, DART represents an unprecedented success for planetary defense, but it is also a mission of unity with a real benefit for all humanity,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson in a statement. “As NASA studies the cosmos and our home planet, we’re also working to protect that home, and this international collaboration turned science fiction into science fact, demonstrating one way to protect Earth.”

Advertisement

We have learned one thing about asteroid responses already. The Virtual Telescope Project had the Klein Karoo Observatory focused on Dimorphos and observed it increase by roughly four magnitudes (40 times) as a result of the dust thrown up by the impact, before fading again within about 10 minutes.

close up image of Dimorphos' surface

The last complete image of Dimorphos, taken 2 seconds before impact. Image credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL

Neither Didymos nor Dimorphos represent threats to Earth for the foreseeable future. Dimorphos was chosen as a target because we had measured its orbit around the larger asteroid so accurately that we will be able to tell precisely how much the force of DART hitting affects it.

That’s still the plan, but with the craft itself now presumably splattered across the asteroid’s surface and incapable of conducting any measurements or sending any signals, we must wait on ground-based observations. The results of those are expected to take weeks. 

Advertisement

In four years’ time, the European Space Agency’s Hera mission will visit the Didymos/Dimorphos system to study the aftermath of the collision. By gaining a precise measure of Dimorphos’ mass, it will calibrate the size of spacecraft we would need to produce similar shifts for heavier asteroids.

Depending on how much Dimorphos’ orbit shifts, we will be able to decide whether the so-called “kinetic impact” approach will be a suitable method for diverting similar objects in future should they dare threaten our beloved home (ruining the planet being a job we reserve for ourselves). The idea would not be to blow intruders up, Bruce Willis-style, but to cause them to divert just enough to slide safely past.

However, asteroids come in many different compositions, from solid lumps of stony iron to “rubble piles” barely holding themselves together. Moreover, the biggest threat may actually be from comets formed largely of ice.

Advertisement

The ultimate planetary defense system will probably require a number of different methods customized to specific types of threats. DART, therefore, will tell us how well kinetic impact fits into that toolkit, but it won’t end the search for other solutions, even if the forthcoming results show it was a major success.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Soccer-Premier League players to be encouraged to take COVID-19 vaccine through government videos
  2. Argentina cabinet rebellion flares as VP slams fiscal failures
  3. Marketmind: Evergrande worries? Not really
  4. Britain’s Asda to expand rapid delivery service

Source Link: “We Have Impact”: NASA’s DART Mission Scores A Direct Hit On Asteroid Dimorphos

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The US’s Surprisingly Recent Plan To Nuke The Moon In Search Of “Negative Mass”
  • 14,400-Year-Old Paw Prints Are World’s Oldest Evidence Of Humans Living Alongside Domesticated Dogs
  • The Tribe That Has Lived Deep Within The Grand Canyon For Over 1,000 Years
  • Finger Monkeys: The Smallest Monkeys In The World Are Tiny, Chatty, And Adorable
  • Atmospheric River Brings North America’s Driest Place 25 Percent Of Its Yearly Rainfall In A Single Day
  • These Extinct Ice Age Giant Ground Sloths Were Fans Of “Cannonball Fruit”, Something We Still Eat Today
  • Last Year’s Global Aurora-Sparking “Superstorm” Squashed Earth’s Plasmasphere To A Fifth Its Usual Size
  • Theia – The Giant Impactor That Formed The Moon – Assembled Closer To The Sun Than Earth Is Now
  • Testosterone And Body Odor May Quietly Influence How People Perceive The Social Status Of Men
  • There Have Been At Least 50 Incidents Of Spiders Capturing And Eating Bats (That We Know Of)
  • A “Very Old, Undisturbed Structure” May Have Been Discovered Beyond The Orbit Of Neptune, 43 AU From The Sun
  • NASA Finally Reveals Comet 3I/ATLAS Images From 8 Missions, Including First From Another Planet’s Surface
  • 360 Million Years Ago, Cleveland Was Home To A Giant Predatory Fish Unlike Anything Alive Today
  • Under RFK Jr, CDC Turns Against Scientific Consensus On Autism And Vaccines, Incorrectly Claiming Lack Of Evidence
  • Megalodon VS T. Rex: Who Had The Biggest Teeth?
  • The 100 Riskiest Decisions You’ll Likely Ever Make
  • Funky-Nosed “Pinocchio” Chameleons Get A Boost As They Turn Out To Be Multiple Species
  • The Leech Craze: The Medical Fad That Nearly Eradicated A Species
  • Unusual Rock Found By NASA’s Perseverance Rover Likely “Formed Elsewhere In The Solar System”
  • Where Does The “H” In Jesus H. Christ Come From? This Bible Scholar Explains All
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version