Since NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) successfully impacted its target
nearly five months ago, on Sept. 26 — altering the orbit of the asteroid
moonlet Dimorphos by 33 minutes — the DART team has been hard at work analyzing
the data collected from the world’s first planetary defense test mission.
The DART mission employed an
asteroid-deflection technique known as a “kinetic impactor,” which in simplest
terms means smashing a thing into another thing — in this case, a spacecraft
into an asteroid. From the data, the DART investigation team, led by the Johns
Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, found that a
kinetic impactor mission like DART can be effective in altering the trajectory
of an asteroid, a big step toward the goal of preventing future asteroid
strikes on Earth. These findings were published in four papers in the journal
Nature.
“I cheered when DART slammed head on into
the asteroid for the world’s first planetary defense technology demonstration,
and that was just the start,” said Nicola Fox, associate administrator for the
Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “These findings
add to our fundamental understanding of asteroids and build a foundation for
how humanity can defend Earth from a potentially hazardous asteroid by altering
its course."
The first paper reports DART’s successful demonstration of kinetic
impactor technology in detail: reconstructing the impact itself, reporting the
timeline leading up to impact, specifying in detail the location and nature of
the impact site, and recording the size and shape of Dimorphos.
The authors, led by Terik Daly, Carolyn
Ernst, and Olivier Barnouin of APL, note DART’s successful autonomous targeting
of a small asteroid, with limited prior observations, is a critical first step
on the path to developing kinetic impactor technology as a viable operational
capability for planetary defense.
This image depicts the footprint of the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft and its two long solar panels over the spot where it impacted asteroid Dimorphos. The largest boulder near the impact site is about 6.5 meters (21 feet) across. DART took the underlying image three seconds before impact. Credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL
Their findings show intercepting an asteroid with a diameter of around half
a mile, such as Dimorphos, can be achieved without an advance reconnaissance
mission, though advance reconnaissance would give valuable information for
planning and predicting the outcome. What is necessary is
sufficient warning time — several years at a minimum, but preferably decades.
“Nevertheless,” the authors state in the paper, DART’s success “builds optimism
about humanity’s capacity to protect the Earth from an asteroid threat.”
When the DART spacecraft slammed into asteroid Dimorphos, the spacecraft body hit between two large boulders while its two solar panels impacted those boulders. The yellow surface is a digital terrain model of the impact site made from DART images, and the rendering of the DART spacecraft depicts its position a few tens of microseconds before impact. The white line extending from the back of the spacecraft shows the spacecraft’s trajectory. The spacecraft body, or bus, was about 1.3 meters (4.3 feet) from front to back. Credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL
The second paper uses two independent approaches based on Earth-based
lightcurve and radar observations. The investigation team, led by
Cristina Thomas of Northern Arizona University, arrived at two consistent measurements of
the period change from the kinetic impact: 33 minutes, plus or
minus one minute. This large change indicates the recoil from material
excavated from the asteroid and ejected into space by the impact (known as
ejecta) contributed significant momentum change to the asteroid, beyond that of
the DART spacecraft itself.
The key to kinetic impact is that the push to the asteroid comes not only
from colliding spacecraft, but also from this ejecta recoil. The authors
conclude: “To serve as a proof-of-concept for the kinetic impactor technique of
planetary defense, DART needed to demonstrate that an asteroid could be
targeted during a high-speed encounter and that the target’s orbit could be
changed. DART has successfully done both.”
In the third paper, the investigation team, led by Andrew Cheng of
APL, calculated the momentum change
transferred to the asteroid as a result of DART’s kinetic impact by studying the change in the orbital period of Dimorphos. They found
the impact caused an instantaneous slowing in Dimorphos’ speed along its orbit
of about 2.7 millimeters per second — again indicating the recoil from ejecta
played a major role in amplifying the momentum change directly imparted to the
asteroid by the spacecraft. That momentum change was amplified by a factor of
2.2 to 4.9 (depending on the mass of Dimorphos), indicating the momentum change
transferred because of ejecta production significantly exceeded the momentum
change from the DART spacecraft alone.
This finding “[validates] the effectiveness of kinetic impact for
preventing future asteroid strikes on the Earth,” the authors conclude.
DART’s scientific value goes beyond validating kinetic impactor as a means
of planetary defense. By smashing into Dimorphos, the mission has broken new
ground in the study of asteroids. DART’s impact made Dimorphos an “active
asteroid” — a space rock that orbits like an asteroid but has a tail of material
like a comet – which is detailed in the fourth paper led by Jian-Yang Li of the
Planetary Science Institute.
Although scientists had proposed that some active asteroids are the result
of impact events, until now no one had ever observed the activation of an
asteroid. The DART mission activated Dimorphos under
precisely known and carefully observed impact conditions, enabling the detailed study of the formation of an active asteroid for
the first time.
“DART, as a controlled, planetary-scale impact experiment, provides a
detailed characterization of the target, the ejecta morphology, and the entire
ejecta evolution process,” the authors write. “DART will continue to be the
model for studies of newly discovered asteroids that show activity caused by
natural impacts.”
DART’s Legacy Begins
“We are so proud of the DART team and the investigation’s latest results,”
said Jason Kalirai, Civil Space Mission Area Executive at APL. “With the core
analysis activities starting after the impact of Dimorphos, the results
demonstrate how successful the kinetic impactor technique can be — paving the
way for a bright future for planetary defense.”
Johns Hopkins APL manages the DART mission for NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office as a project of the agency’s Planetary Missions Program Office. The LICIACube project is managed by ASI Robotic Exploration Mission Office, with industrial contractor Argotec S.r.I. and a scientific team from the National Institute of Astrophysics, Polytechnic University of Milan, the University of Bologna, the University of Naples Parthenope, and CNR-IFAC.
For more information about DART, visit https://www.nasa.gov/dartmission
Written by Ajai Raj, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
Source: NASA’s DART Data Validates Kinetic Impact as Planetary Defense Method | NASA
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