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NASA Space

NASA Drops Spacecraft Into Orbit Around Potentially Hazardous Asteroid Bennu (cnet.com) 50

NASA's asteroid-chasing Osiris-Rex spacecraft has been placed in an orbit around Bennu, an asteroid that drifts through the solar system's asteroid belt between Earth and Mars. "By inserting itself into orbit around Bennu, Osiris-Rex will survey the asteroid from a distance of only about 1 mile (1.75 kilometers) from its center," reports CNET. "Bennu's small size creates an incredibly tiny gravitational force, so maintaining that orbit will require lots of little adjustments, made by NASA and its collaborating organizations." From the report: "The gravity of Bennu is so small, forces like solar radiation and thermal pressure from Bennu's surface become much more relevant and can push the spacecraft around in its orbit much more than if it were orbiting around Earth or Mars, where gravity is by far the most dominant force," said Dan Wibben, maneuver and trajectory design lead. NASA also released a GIF of the various surveys Osiris-Rex carried out after arriving at Bennu in early December The series of images, captured between Nov. 30 and Dec. 31, helped the team more accurately determine Bennu's mass, which ensured that the orbital insertion would proceed smoothly.

The orbital period, lasting until mid-February, is expected to provide additional details about Bennu's gravity, orientation and spin, along with a better understanding of its mass. All those observations should lead to completing one of the chief objectives for Osiris-Rex: retrieve a sample from Bennu's surface and fly it back to Earth. In 2020, the spacecraft will extend a specially designed arm, called Tagsam, for a brief high-five with the asteroid. The arm will blow nitrogen gas onto the surface of Bennu, kicking up handfuls of dirt, which the spacecraft will fly back to Earth in 2023.

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NASA Drops Spacecraft Into Orbit Around Potentially Hazardous Asteroid Bennu

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  • They'll be able to use the microgravity "pull" exerted by the spacecraft to gradually steer the object clear of Earth

    Strat

    • Failing that a bunch of herpin' derpin' oilmen will destroy it - but only after them there fancy-pants book-learned so-called "scientists" totally fail it.

    • If not, they could try to shoot depleted uranium slugs at it via a giant railgun.

    • It would be kind of funny if the tiny effect of the nearby probe would create a course correction that resulted in a hit rather than a near miss near the end of the 22nd century. OK, maybe "funny" is not quite the right word...

  • I thought the asteroid belt was between Mars and Jupiter?

    • Re:Sunday best (Score:5, Informative)

      by Zocalo ( 252965 ) on Saturday January 05, 2019 @07:05AM (#57908434) Homepage
      A combination of poor and inaccurate phrasing from TFA. The densest part of belt does indeed lie between Mars and Jupiter but, depending what objects you decide qualify as being part of the asteroid belt, outlier asteroids and those with highly eliptical orbits can be found all the way inside the orbit of Mercury to beyond Saturn. There are also three significant asteroid groupings that lie on the orbit of Jupiter (known as the Greeks, Trojans, and Hildas). Bennu's orbit also happens to just cross that of Earth - it has to really, or there wouldn't be an impact risk - but the majority of it does indeed lie between Earth and Mars, although it's always much closer to Earth's orbit than that of Mars.
  • I thought that the US government was shutdown right now. Why is NASA still working?

    Although, I could imagine that the folks working on this project would continue, even if they didn't get paid for it.

    • It is and the AC doesn't know what he's talking about.

      From Space.com

      " Most NASA personnel will be furloughed until such an agreement is reached, agency officials explained recently in a shutdown FAQ. "Most" is something of an understatement, in fact; about 95 percent of NASA employees won't be able to go to work.

      But don't panic: There are "excepted" employees, such as the folks responsible for keeping NASA people and property safe. And "property" includes currently operational spacecraft, as well as the dat
  • Week old news
  • The acceleration experienced by Osiris-Rex while in orbit = G m / r_oribit^2
    = (6*10^-11)*(6*10^10)/(1700^2) = 1*10^-6 m/sec^2

    The force exerted on by Bennu on Osiris-Rex (assuming mass of 880 kg) while in orbit = G m_B m_OR / r_orbit^2
    = 880*(6*10^-11)*(6*10^10)/(1700^2) = 0.001 Newtons.

    Tidal force of sun on Osiris-Rex = G m_OR m_Sun r_orbit / (1 AU)^3 = 6*10^-11*880*2*10^30*1700/(150*10^9)^3
    = 50 nano-Newtons.

    Light pressure from sun = A_OR S_Sun/c = A_OR*P = 6*4.5^10^-6 = 30 micro-Newtons.

    Thermal Radiatio

    • by irchans ( 527097 )

      I think the thermal pressure calculation should not include albedo.

      Thermal Radiation Pressure from Bennu = S_B A / c
      = S_Sun * pi r_B^2 / (4 pi r_orbit^2) A /c = S_Sun *r_B^2 / (4 r_orbit^2) A/c
      = 1300*262^2/(4*1700^2)*6/(3*10^8) = 150 nano-Newtons.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Full rotation: https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/styles/full_width/public/thumbnails/image/bennushapemodel.gif

  • What a pathetic click bait title. Bennu is only hazardous to the inanimate object circling it.

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