NASA is developing the first-ever mission, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test that will deflect a near-Earth asteroid, and help test the systems that will allow mankind to protect the planet from potential cosmic body impacts in the future.
The Double Asteroid Redirection Test
- DART would be NASA’s first mission to demonstrate what’s known as the kinetic impactor technique striking the asteroid to shift its orbit to defend against a potential future asteroid impact.
- DART is a critical step in demonstrating we can protect our planet from a future asteroid impact.
- It is being designed and would be built and managed by the John Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory is moving from concept development to preliminary design phase.
Experiment on a real asteroid
- The target for DART is an asteroid, the asteroid is called Didymos that will have a distant approach to Earth in October 2022, and then again in 2024.
- The asteroid system that consists of two bodies: Didymos A and Didymos B.
- DART would impact only the smaller of the two bodies, Didymos B.
- After launch, DART would fly to Didymos and use an APL- developed on board autonomous targeting system to aim itself at Didymos B.
- Then the refrigerator-sized spacecraft would strike the smaller body at a speed about nine times faster than a bullet, about six kilometres per second.
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Earth-based observatories would be able to see the impact and the resulting change in the orbit of Didymos B around Didymos A, allowing scientists to better determine the capabilities of kinetic impact as an asteroid mitigation strategy.
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By doing it well before the predicted impact so that this small nudge will add up over time to a big shift of the asteroid’s path away from Earth.
Source : The Hindu
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