homehome Home chatchat Notifications


NASA will soon crash DART into asteroid to demonstrate planetary defense

If successful, it could become a template to ward off Earth-bound asteroids.

Jordan Strickler
September 2, 2022 @ 11:42 am

share Share

The threat of an asteroid constantly looms over Earth, but it’s been over 65 million blessed years since a really big one actually hit our home planet (RIP dinosaurs). But that doesn’t mean we should be complacent. In fact, researchers are actively working on our defense in the unlikely case of an asteroid threat. This month, NASA will attempt to hit one to better understand how a dangerous asteroid could be deflected.

DART will smash itself into Dimorphos at 15,000 mph. (Credit: NASA)

The space agency will attempt to pancake a craft into the asteroid Dimorphos. The ship is dubbed DART for Double Asteroid Redirection Test, and it’s a joint project between NASA and the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL).

Dimorphos is a moonlet asteroid — an astronomical object that orbits a minor planet as its natural satellite. It has a diameter of 160 meters (525 feet) and orbits the larger asteroid, Didymos, which has a diameter of 780 meters (0.48 miles). Since they only account for about 15% of all spotted asteroids, binary asteroids (where two space rocks move in tandem) are of particular interest to scientists. DART lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket last November in a US$330-million project.

As seen from Earth, the Didymos system consists of an eclipsing binary in which Dimorphos orbits the larger asteroid and crosses in front of and then back behind it. Without a second probe to compare data, scientists must measure the impact using a telescope on Earth to track the moon’s changing brightness as it orbits the Earth.

This technique will allow researchers to see how much the impact modifies Dimorphos’ orbit by comparing measurements taken before and after the collision. To maximize the quality of telescopic observations, the impact was scheduled for the fall of 2022, when the distance between Earth and Didymos will be at its shortest. Since Didymos will be some 11.3 million kilometers (6.8 million miles) from Earth at the time of impact, telescopes all over the world will be able to participate in the international observing campaign to measure the aftermath of DART’s collision.

“We don’t want to be in a situation where an asteroid is headed toward Earth and then have to be testing this kind of capability. We want to know about both how the spacecraft works and what the reaction will be by the asteroid to the impact before we ever get in a situation like that,” said Lindley Johnson, planetary defense officer for NASA, in November 2021.

Credit: Johns Hopkins.

In order to achieve the kinetic impact deflection, the DART spacecraft will smash itself into the asteroid at a speed of 15,000 mph (24,140 kph). It’s not good for the spaceship’s health, but it’s great for research. The force of the impact will be similar to that of a three-ton TNT explosion — certainly not nuclear, but quite large nonetheless. If everything goes according to plan, the collision will cause a change of orbital velocity of less than one percent, shortening the moonlet’s orbit by several minutes.

Earth-based observations will aid in evaluating the strategy of crashing objects into asteroids to deflect their orbit. Even though DART’s impact on Dimorphos’ orbit will be relatively minor, it should be enough to deflect the asteroid from its path significantly. If successful, this would demonstrate that this technique is capable of deflecting a dangerous asteroid on an actual collision course with Earth.

Measuring only about a meter on both sides, in the realm of satellites, DART is quite compact. When its two solar arrays are extended, its size increases to 40 feet (20 meters) in length. The ship will also carry a secondary load.

LICIACube (Light Italian CubeSat for Imaging of Asteroids), developed by Italy’s space agency, the Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, is riding shotgun and will be released from the mother craft about 10 days prior to impact. Its goal is to photograph the final moments of DART’s life.

The impact is scheduled for September 26. You can also watch the event online. NASA will live stream it on NASA TV and on its website. It also can be viewed on its accounts on FacebookTwitter, and YouTube.

share Share

Space Solar Panels Could Cut Europe’s Reliance on Land-Based Renewables by 80 Percent

A new study shows space solar panels could slash Europe’s energy costs by 2050.

Astronomers See Inside The Core of a Dying Star For the First Time, Confirm How Heavy Atoms Are Made

An ‘extremely stripped supernova’ confirms the existence of a key feature of physicists’ models of how stars produce the elements that make up the Universe.

Scientists May Have Found a New Mineral on Mars. It Hints The Red Planet Stayed Warm Longer

Scientists trace an enigmatic infrared band to heated, oxygen-altered sulfates.

A Comet That Exploded Over Earth 12,800 Years Ago May Have Triggered Centuries of Bitter Cold

Comet fragments may have sparked Earth’s mysterious 1,400-year cold spell.

Astronomers Find ‘Punctum,’ a Bizarre Space Object That Might be Unlike Anything in the Universe

Bright, polarized, and unseen in any other light — Punctum challenges astrophysical norms.

How Much Has Mercury Shrunk?

Mercury is still shrinking as it cools in the aftermath of its formation; new research narrows down estimates of just how much it has contracted.

First Complete Picture of Nighttime Clouds on Mars

Data captured by the Emirates Mars Mission reveal that clouds are typically thicker during Martian nighttime than daytime.

A Supermassive Black Hole 36 Billion Times the Mass of the Sun Might Be the Heaviest Ever Found

In a massive galaxy, known for its unique visual effect lies an even more massive black hole.

Scientists Have a Plan to Launch a Chip-Sized, Laser-Powered Spacecraft Toward a Nearby Black Hole and Wait 100 Years for It to Send a Signal Home

One scientist thinks we can see what's really in a black hole.

Distant Exoplanet Triggers Stellar Flares and Triggers Its Own Destruction

HIP 67522 b can’t stop blasting itself in the face with stellar flares, a type of magnetic interaction that scientists have spent decades looking for.