Friday, February 22, 2019

Japan's Hayabusa2 Lands on asteroid🛰

Japan's Hayabusa2 Lands on Asteroid Ryugu

Hayabusa2

Spacecraft fired bullet made a difficult touchdown, to now collect samples; Japan remains the only nation to bring back materials from a celestial body other than the moon. 



Japan's Hayabusa2 spacecraft on Friday landed on the surface of an asteroid located 340 million km from Earth to collect space-rock samples, a significant step in a complex mission to study life's origins. The probe touched down on Ryugu's surface at 7.49 am fired a bullet into the surface to puff up dust for collection and blasted back to its holding position, according to the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Hayabusa2 traveled for over three years before landing and is scheduled to return to Earth at the end of 2020 with samples collected from the asteroid.


JAXA  scientists were following the developments from the mission control center in Kanagawa, southwest of Tokyo. The anchorage took place from an altitude of 20km, where the probe had been circling the asteroid since last June. Its descent began on Thursday afternoon. In a press conference in Tokyo, mission manager Makoto Yoshikawa expressed his "relief" at the successful landing, which, in his opinion, marked a new beginning for planetary science. Yuichi Tsuda, another manager of the mission, said the landing was carried out optimally, including the firing of the bullet.

Experts of Japan's aerospace agency called Hayabusa2's landing a groundbreaking feat owing to the remoteness of the asteroid and the technical difficulties involved.

Japan is the only country until now to have brought back materials from a celestial body other than the Moon through the first Hayabusa mission in 2010. After landing, the Hayabusa2 spacecraft fired a projectile made of the metal tantalum at the surface of the Ryugu asteroid to create an artificial crater and extract materials.

Ryugu

The rocky surface and low gravitational force of the asteroid hugely complicated the manoeuver, Japanese scientists said. The forced delay the probe's landing, which was initially scheduled for October 2018.

The signals sent by Hayabusa2 indicated that the samples of the materials were successfully collected material although this could only be confirmed once the rover returns to Earth, said JAXA Research Director Takashi Kubota.

It is believed that the rocks on Ryugu contain traces of coal and water formed during the birth of our Solar system about 4.6 billion years ago, which could provide clues about the origin of the Solar system and life on Earth, the report said.

The probe also sent three small rovers on Ryugu in 2018 with the aim of collecting additional samples and is scheduled to make more landings before starting its journey back to Earth.

The square shape of Ryugu

Asteroid Ryugu is about 900 meters in diameter and slightly cubic in shape. Like other asteroids, it is considered to be among the oldest bodies in the Solar System.

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