NASA’s OSIRIS-Rex mission will map and study the asteroid Bennu before bringing a sample home.
In 2023, a bit of the primordial solar system will return to Earth. That’s when NASA’s OSIRIS-Rex mission will return a sample of the asteroid Bennu, a carbon-rich rock hosting traces of the early solar system. While there, the mission will conduct an in-depth study of the rocky body, learning more about how sunlight can shift its position, before gathering a small sample to return to Earth.
Visiting an asteroid
After its September 8, 2016, launch, the Origins-Spectral Interpretation-Resource Identification-Security-Regolith Explorer, or OSIRIS-Rex , will spend two years traveling through space to arrive at Bennu in 2018. The second mission in the world to bring back a bit of an asteroid, OSIRIS-Rex will follow in the footsteps of Japan’s Hayabusa , which in 2010 became the first spacecraft to bring a bit of an asteroid back to Earth. It will be the first U.S. asteroid sample return mission.
The bits and pieces left over from the formation of the planets, asteroids carry the blueprints of the early solar system. Studying them allows scientists to see what the early solar system was like, and get a handle on how planets formed.
NASA’s Dawn mission visited the asteroid Vesta before moving on to the dwarf planet Ceres. In contrast, OSIRIS-Rex will bring home a piece of Bennu for in-depth laboratory studies not possible while orbiting in space. The team hopes to collect at least 2 ounces (60 grams) of material to achieve their scientific goals.
Understanding how asteroids form will not only provide insight about the early solar system, but also help scientists better understand their makeup today. That could be helpful should any space rocks threaten to collide with Earth. It could also assist in future efforts to mine asteroids.
“The mission will develop important technologies for space exploration that will benefit anyone interested in exploring or mining asteroids, whether it’s NASA or a private company,” Dante Lauretta said in a statement . Lauretta, a planetary scientist at the University of Arizona, Tucson, is the principal investigator for OSIRIS-Rex.
OSIRIS-Rex will also help astronomers study the Yarkovsky effect on asteroids. Heat from the sun provides a tiny push that can affect the movement of an asteroid. Although the push is minimal, it can build over time, helping to change the path a space rock travels. But the effect can be a challenge to study, as it varies based on the shape of each asteroid.
“The knowledge from the mission will help us to develop methods to better track the orbits of asteroids,” Jim Green, director of NASA ‘s Planetary Science Division, said in a statement .
Sampling an asteroid
Once OSIRIS-Rex reaches Bennu, five instruments on board the spacecraft will study, map and analyze the asteroid in unprecedented detail.
- OSIRIS-Rex Visible and Infrared Spectrometer (OVIRS) — By measuring visible and near-infrared light, OVIRS will hunt for organics and other minerals.
- OSIRIS-Rex Thermal Emission Spectrometer (OTES) — Using the thermal infrared, OTES take Bennu’s temperature and map mineral and chemical abundances. Together, OVIRS and OTES will map Bennu over a wave of interesting wavelengths to help select the best site to sample the asteroid.
- OSIRIS-Rex Camera Suite (OCAMS) — A three-camera suite will help map Bennu. PolyCam, the largest, will acquire the first images of Bennu from 1.2 million miles (2 million kilometers) and capture high resolution images of the sample site. MapCam will hunt for satellites and dust plumes around the asteroid, map it in color, and take the photographs to create topographic maps. SamCam will document the collection of the sample and its capture.
- OSIRIS-Rex Laser Altimeter (OLA) — By scanning the entire surface of Bennu, OLA will create highly accurate 3-D shape models of the asteroid.
- Regolith X-ray Imaging Spectrometer (REXIS) — Studying X-ray emissions of Bennu will help provide an elemental abundance map of its surface. Unlike other imaging instruments, REXIS will examine the composition of the asteroid at the level of individual atomic elements.
Once the asteroid has been studied in significant detail, scientists will identify a region to sample. That’s where the Touch-And-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism (TAGSAM) will come into play. As OSIRIS-Rex draws closer to the asteroid, TAGSAM will blast a sample of pure nitrogen gas at the surface. Regolith (dust and broken rock) blasted from the surface will be pushed into the chamber of the sampler.
To complete all of the planned science, OSIRIS-Rex needs to collect at least 2 ounces (60 grams). The goal is to collect 5 ounces (150 g) to account for any errors in measurement. Three bottles of nitrogen gas allow for multiple collection attempts, and TAGSAM can carry as much as 70 ounces (2,000 g). To weigh the sample in the low-gravity environment, scientists will measure the angular acceleration of the spacecraft before and after the sample is collected.
Although OSIRIS-Rex will sample Bennu, it will never actually land on the surface. Contact during the collection process will be brief, lasting only a few seconds.
“We kiss the surface,” OSIRIS-Rex principal investigator Mike Drake, of the University of Arizona, told reporters.
After scooping up the sample OSIRIS-Rex will return to Earth, arriving home in 2023.
NASA’s OSIRIS-Rex mission will spend 2 years mapping an asteroid before returning a sample to Earth.
Credit: NASA
Meet Bennu
Originally known as 1999 RQ36, the rock OSIRIS-Rex will visit was renamed Bennu by 9-year-old Mike Puzio in a 2013 contest . Bennu is an Egyptian god usually depicted as a gray heron. Puzio chose the name because he thought TAGSAM and the solar panels resembled the bird god’s neck and wings.
Bennu is one of several thousand Near-Earth Objects orbiting within 120 million miles (190 million kilometers) of Earth. Among those, Bennu was one of less than 200 whose orbit was well known and sufficiently Earth-like. It orbits the sun every 436 days, and comes very close to Earth every six years.
It’s also relatively large, about 1,650 feet (500 meters) wide. Rocks smaller than 650 feet (200 m) spin too rapidly to allow a spacecraft to safely land on them. Only a handful of the asteroids in appropriate orbits were large enough to allow a visit.
Among those deemed appropriate, the asteroid has just the right composition. Bennu is relatively rich in carbon-based material. The asteroids that may have brought water and organic material to Earth that helped kick off life would look like Bennu.
“We’re going for something rich in organics, which might have had something to do with life getting started,” Drake said.
“That’s the idea — time capsule, containing probably the building blocks of life.”
Bennu’s close orbit also makes it a potentially hazardous object , but unlike some media reports, it isn’t a definite threat. NASA scientists calculated that there is an 0.037 percent (or 1-in-2,700) chance that it will strike Earth in the last quarter of the 22nd century. For that to happen, the asteroid would need to have its orbit altered in its 2135 flyby of Earth. Studying Bennu today will help them further calculate the orbit, potentially ruling it out.
If the asteroid does collide with Earth , it won’t destroy the planet, though it will wreak havoc wherever it touches down. Experts say that the size of the asteroid would likely devastate the local area, but won’t cause mass extinctions. In order to cause a global catastrophe, a space rock must be at least twice as large, at 0.6 miles (1 km) wide. Still, the advanced warning provided by OSIRIS-Rex could help scientists take preventative measures long before the potential impact.
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