Friday, September 20, 2024

Europe’s Hera probe to launch Oct. 7 to inspect asteroid NASA smacked in 2022

NASAEurope's Hera probe to launch Oct. 7 to inspect asteroid NASA smacked in 2022


Europe’s highly anticipated Hera mission to catalog the wreckage of the asteroid Dimorphos has arrived at its Florida launch site for final checks ahead of its planned liftoff early next month.

The main Hera spacecraft and its two partner cubesats, named Milani and Juventas, are set to launch atop a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Oct. 7 at 10:52 a.m. EDT (1452 GMT) from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. They’ll arrive at Dimorphos in late 2026, on a mission to study the aftermath of NASA’s planetary defense test, which intentionally smashed a spacecraft into the asteroid in September 2022, shortening its orbit by 33 minutes and permanently altering its shape.

“We’re very excited to go back and see what it looks like,” Patrick Michel, Hera’s principal investigator, said at the Europlanet Science Congress on Friday (Sept. 13) in Berlin.

The Hera mission’s two accompanying cubesats, Milani (at left) and Juventas, are seen on the ground in Florida on Sept. 3, 2024 ahead of a planned Oct. 7 launch. (Image credit: ESA)

Hera will assess the size and depth of the crater on Dimorphos created by NASA’s DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) spacecraft, and determine whether the impact did indeed reshape the rubble-pile asteroid, as early simulations indicate. Once deployed, the two cubesats will for the first time assess Dimorphos’ internal structure, surface minerals as well as gravity, data that will help scientists correctly reproduce the asteroid’s final structure in their computer models, Michel said at the conference. Such models will then inform future planetary defense missions that similarly aim to deflect asteroids headed toward Earth.

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