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NASA

NASA Finally Unlocks Stuck Fasteners on Asteroid Sample Capsule (space.com) 37

"For months, bits of an asteroid collected by a U.S. probe during a billion-mile trek were out of reach to scientists," reports Space.com, "locked inside a return capsule in a NASA facility with two stuck fasteners preventing access to the rocky space treasure.

"This week, NASA won its battle against those fasteners."

More details from CNN: The space agency already harvested about 2.5 ounces (70 grams) of rocks and dust from its OSIRIS-REx mission, which traveled nearly 4 billion miles to collect the unprecedented sample from the near-Earth asteroid called Bennu. But NASA revealed in October that some material remained out of reach in a capsule hidden inside an instrument called the Touch-and-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism — a robotic arm with a storage container at one end that collected the sample from Bennu. The sampler head is held shut by 35 fasteners, according to NASA, but two of them proved too difficult to open.

Prying the mechanism loose is no simple task. The space agency must use preapproved materials and tools around the capsule to minimize the risk of damaging or contaminating the samples. These "new tools also needed to function within the tightly-confined space of the glovebox, limiting their height, weight, and potential arc movement," said Dr. Nicole Lunning, OSIRIS-REx curation lead at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, in a statement. "The curation team showed impressive resilience and did incredible work to get these stubborn fasteners off the TAGSAM head so we can continue disassembly. We are overjoyed with the success."

To address the issue, NASA said they designed and fabricated two new, multi-part tools out of surgical steel. NASA says that a "few additional disassembly steps" still remain, but there's a video on their web site showing the operation (along with some pictures).

NASA adds that "Later this spring, the curation team will release a catalog of the OSIRIS-REx samples, which will be available to the global scientific community." But CNN notes that an analysis of material from last fall "already revealed the samples from the asteroid contained abundant water in the form of hydrated clay minerals as well as carbon," CNN reports. And they add that scientists believe this bolsters the theory that water arrived on Earth billions of years ago on an asteroid...
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NASA Finally Unlocks Stuck Fasteners on Asteroid Sample Capsule

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  • Maybe the AI editor would run a spellchecker and at least not write Capusleâ¦
    • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

      LOL! I hadn't noticed and those usually jump to my face. Must be a stealth one :) But seriously, a simple browser spell checker would have done the job!

    • Well, at least they use encapuslation and probably polyphormism.
    • Maybe the AI editor would run a spellchecker and at least not write Capusleâ¦

      Says somebody who can't even use ASCII quotes.

      They've only been around since 1961, FFS.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      spellchecker

      The residents of Capusle, Montenegro would like a word with you.

  • by lsllll ( 830002 ) on Saturday January 13, 2024 @11:54AM (#64155841)
    I can just see someone at NASA sneaking in the middle of the night and using a couple jets from a can of WD-40 to get the job done and surprise everyone the next day.
    • WD-40 is not penetrating oil. Sometimes it works but its performance for this application is low.
  • by botmaster42 ( 6970014 ) on Saturday January 13, 2024 @12:20PM (#64155907)

    Did I see what I thought I saw, that the fasteners were on there or were Philips head screws? If that is the case that seems ill conceived. And looks from the video why they needed this custom tool to provide enough downward pressure on the screw head to lessen the risk of stripping it. Seems like they would want to use something like a hexagon or Robertson drive head on those screws. Was this made in China?

  • They finally found the hammer again.

  • extra terrestrial life, to stay on topic

  • And neither did their sister company IKEA in Jersey.

  • Around 1:06 in the video, it can be seen that the hard-to-remove fasteners were Phillips-Head screws. They deserve every bit of pain that ensued for making such a terrible choice.
  • There is not such thing as surgical steel. Sometimes 316L is called that name. However it's a terrible alloy for toolmaking.
    • I thought all surgical steel was 316L. on a related note, I'm guessing the low chromium content is to avoid contaminating the samples.

  • I can imagine how this went. The engineer designed it for six. The approving manager wanted to add their input, so we have eight fasteners. The next level of management added another couple of fasteners. And so it goes until final approval and 35 fasteners. Because, you know, the vacuum of space is hard to contain.
  • Geeze NASA, next time just call me. All you had to do was run it under hot water for a minute, and then tap the lid a few times with the heavy end of a butter knife.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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