Home Science Indonesia NASA launches spacecraft to explore metal-rich asteroid Psyche: Report

NASA launches spacecraft to explore metal-rich asteroid Psyche: Report

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NASA launches spacecraft to explore metal-rich asteroid Psyche: Report

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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) launched a spacecraft from Florida on 14 October on its way to Psyche, which is the largest of the several metal-rich asteroids known in our solar system and believed by scientists to be the remnant core of an ancient protoplanet.

According to details, the Psyche probe blasted off under partly cloudy skies from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral on a planned journey of 2.2 billion miles (3.5 billion km) through space. The probe was folded inside the cargo bay of a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.

NASA expects the spacecraft, roughly the size of a small van, to reach the asteroid in August 2029.

ALSO READ: NASA’s first asteroid sample has landed that may give clues about Earth’s enemies in outer space

The launch, shown live on NASA TV, marks the latest in a series of recent NASA missions seeking insights about the origins of our planet about 4.5 billion years ago by sending robotic spacecraft to explore asteroids – primordial relics from the dawn of the solar system.

NASA said that asteroid Psyche measures roughly 173 miles (279 km) across at its widest point. It resides on the outer fringes of the main asteroid belt between the planets Mars and Jupiter.

Providing more details, the space agency said that cargo-faring panels enclosing the spacecraft inside the nose of the rocket’s upper stage were jettisoned about five minutes after launch, and the probe itself was released into space about an hour later.

It said the process for the spacecraft to autonomously unfurl its twin solar panels and to point its communications antennae toward Earth takes around two hours.

The detection of the probe’s first radio signals was confirmed shortly after it was seen on live video floating free from the rocket by micontrollers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles.

The JPL team plans to spend the next three to four months conducting checks of the spacecraft’s systems before sending it on its deep space journey, reported Reuters.

NASA said that the spacecraft would then orbit it for 26 months after reaching the asteroid, scanning Psyche with instruments built to measure its gravity, magnetic proprieties, and composition.

According to the leading hypothesis, the asteroid is the once-molten, long-frozen inner hulk of a baby planet torn apart by collisions with other celestial bodies in the early solar system. It orbits the sun about three times farther than Earth, even at its closest to our planet.

With agency inputs.

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Updated: 14 Oct 2023, 12:34 AM IST

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