Robot launched to Bennu, the asteroid that could hit Earth in 2187 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:57 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Robot launched to Bennu, the asteroid that could hit Earth in 2187

Researchers dont yet understand much about Bennu, an asteroid scientists believe could, someday, collide with Earth.

Science writer Andrew Fazekas says Bennu has 1 in 1,800 chance of colliding with Earth

The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, enclosed in a payload fairing, is lifted Aug. 29 at Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. (NASA/Dimitri Gerondidakis)

Researchers don't yet understand much about Bennu, an almost-black asteroid scientists believe has remained largely unchanged for 4.5 billion years.

What is known is that the 500-metre"rubble-pile" is a NEO,or Near Earth Object, and that its path around the sun intersects with Earth's orbit andbringsit near thisplanet every few years.

Andrew Fazekas, a science writer and blogger at "The Night Sky Guy," said Bennu has a onein1,800 chance of hitting Earth in the year 2187.

"So it's something we want to keep an eye on," says Fazekas.

Bennu is "a pretty hefty object," according to the science writer.

"It could destroy an entire city quite easily if it had a direct impact," he said.

In addition to potentially destroying major metropolitan areas or, if, the it landed in the sea, causing massive tsunamis, Fazekas says the asteroid is also "full of minerals and precious metals," which could in the distant future be collected by mining operations.

Robot space geologist

OSIRIS-REx contacts the asteroid Bennu with the Touch-And-Go Sample Arm Mechanism or TAGSAM (NASA)
On Thursday, a robotic spacecraft OSIRIS-REx or the Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, and Security-Regolith Explorer blasts off from Cape Canaveral on a seven-year round trip to find out more about Bennu.

The two-tonne robot will grab chunks of the asteroid's surface and bring it back to earth for analysis.

Once studied, the asteroid bits could reveal new information about the formation of the solar system.

"This is really what astronomers are calling a smash-and-grab mission," says Fazekas.

OSIRIS-RExwill arrive back in 2023, "hopefully[with] a wonderful stash of pristine asteroid material," says Fazekas.

Asteroids, he explains, are "leftover remnants from the formation of the solar system": billion of bits of rubble that failed to become moons or planets and moon, and now orbit the solar system.

"These are ancient relics," says Fazekas.

"Some of them date back 4.5 billion years. So for astronomers, it's a scientific boon to be able to scoop up and analyze some of this material."

Canadian laser

The data collected by OSIRIS-REx will be exciting stuff," says science writer Andrew Fazekas. (provided by Andrew Fazekas)
OSIRIS-RExis equipped with a Canadian-made laser altimeter, an instrument used to map the asteroid.

"Our Canadian instrument will create a cartography map at exquisitely high resolutions like never before on missions in the solar system," says Fazekas.

"It also allows us to bring the spacecraft safely down to the asteroid, within only a few metres, so that we can stretch out our robotic arm and scoop up some samples."

In return, Canada will receive fourper cent of the samples, which will "be a boon for many researchers across the country," says Fazekas.

"This is going to be exciting stuff," he says.

He addedthat through the sample analysis, scientistscould better "understand the recipe to make an asteroid, and also the recipe to make planets like Earth."

Back to the asteroid issue

OSIRIS-RExwill, hopefully, also collect data about what the Earth-adjacent asteroid is made out of, thereby reducing the chances of it laying waste to Earth cities in 171 years.

"Right now, the chances [of Bennu colliding with earth] are 1 in 1,800," says Fazekas.

"But with this mission, those chances will hopefully get slimmer."

He adds the research will help scientists answer certain pressing questions.

"What do we do? Launch a mission to nudge it over? Explode the asteroid like in the Hollywood movies? What do we want to do with this asteroid?" he said.

"This mission will help us determine that."

With files from Information Morning Saint John