Photos taken by the Italian LICIACube, short for the
LICIA CubeSat for Imaging of Asteroids. These offer the closest, most detailed
observations of NASA’s DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) impact aftermath
to date. The photo on the left was taken roughly 2 minutes and 40 seconds after
impact, as the satellite flew past the Didymos system. The photo on the right
was taken 20 seconds later, as LICIACube was leaving the scene. The larger
body, near the top of each image is Didymos. The smaller body in the lower half
of each image is Dimorphos, enveloped by the cloud of rocky debris created by
DART’s impact.
NASA/ASI/University of Maryland
On Sept. 11, 2022, engineers at a flight control center in Turin, Italy,
sent a radio signal into deep space. Its destination was NASA’s DART (Double
Asteroid Redirection Test) spacecraft flying toward an asteroid more than 5
million miles away.
The message prompted the spacecraft to execute a series of pre-programmed
commands that caused a small, shoebox-sized satellite contributed by the Italian Space Agency (ASI), called LICIACube, to detach from DART.
Fifteen days later, when DART’s journey ended in an intentional head-on
collision with near-Earth asteroid Dimorphos, LICIACube flew past the asteroid
to snap a series of photos, providing researchers with the only on-site
observations of the world’s first demonstration of an asteroid deflection.
After analyzing LICIACube’s images, NASA and ASI scientists report
on Aug. 21 in the Planetary Science Journal that an estimated 35.3 million pounds (16 million
kilograms) of dust and rocks spewed from the asteroid as a result of the crash,
refining previous estimates that were based on data from ground and space-based
observations.
While the debris shed from the asteroid amounted to less than 0.5% of its total
mass, it was still 30,000 times greater than the mass of the spacecraft. The
impact of the debris on Dimorphos’ trajectory was dramatic: shortly after the
collision, the DART team determined that the flying rubble gave Dimorphos a
shove several times stronger than the hit from the spacecraft itself.
“The plume of material released from the asteroid was like a short burst from a
rocket engine,” said Ramin Lolachi, a research scientist who led the study from
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
The important takeaway from the DART mission is that a small, lightweight
spacecraft can dramatically alter the path of an asteroid of similar size and
composition to Dimorphos, which is a “rubble-pile” asteroid — or a loose,
porous collection of rocky material bound together weakly by gravity.
“We expect that a lot of near-Earth asteroids have a similar structure to
Dimorphos,” said Dave Glenar, a planetary scientist at the University of
Maryland, Baltimore County, who participated in the study. “So, this extra push
from the debris plume is critical to consider when building future spacecraft
to deflect asteroids from Earth.”
The tail of material that formed behind Dimorphos was
prominent almost 12 days after the DART impact, giving the asteroid a
comet-like appearance, as seen in this image captured by NASA’s Hubble Space
Telescope in October 2022. Hubble’s observations were made from roughly 6.8
million miles away.
NASA, ESA, STScI, Jian-Yang Li (PSI); Image
Processing: Joseph DePasquale
DART’s Star Witness
NASA chose Dimorphos, which poses
no threat to Earth, as the mission target due to its relationship with another,
larger asteroid named Didymos. Dimorphos orbits Didymos in a binary asteroid
system, much like the Moon orbits Earth. Critically, the pair’s position
relative to Earth allowed astronomers to measure the duration of the moonlet’s
orbit before and after the collision.
Ground and space-based observations revealed that DART shortened Dimorphos’
orbit by 33 minutes. But these long-range observations, made from 6.8 million
miles (10.9 million kilometers) away, were too distant to support a detailed
study of the impact debris. That was LICIACube’s job.
After DART’s impact, LICIACube had
just 60 seconds to make its most critical observations. Barreling past the
asteroid at 15,000 miles (21,140 kilometers) per hour, the spacecraft took a
snapshot of the debris roughly once every three seconds. Its closest image was
taken just 53 miles (85.3 km) from Dimorphos’ surface.
The short distance between LICIACube and Dimorphos provided a unique advantage,
allowing the cubesat to capture detailed images of the dusty debris from
multiple angles.
The research team studied a series of 18 LICIAcube images. The first images in
the sequence showed LICIACube’s head-on approach. From this angle, the plume
was brightly illuminated by direct sunlight. As the spacecraft glided past the
asteroid, its camera pivoted to keep the plume in view.
This animated series of images was taken by a camera
aboard LICIACube 2 to 3 minutes after DART crashed into Dimorphos. As LICIACube
made its way past the binary pair of asteroids Didymos, the larger one on top,
and Dimorphos, the object at the bottom. The satellite’s viewing angle changed
rapidly during its flyby of Dimorphos, allowing scientists o get a
comprehensive view of the impact plume from a series of angles.
ASI/University of Maryland/Tony Farnham/Nathan Marder
As LICIACube looked back at the asteroid, sunlight filtered through
the dense cloud of debris, and the plume’s brightness faded. This suggested the
plume was made of mostly large particles — about a millimeter or more across —
which reflect less light than tiny dust grains.
Since the innermost parts of the plume were so thick with debris that they
were completely opaque, the scientists used models to estimate the number of
particles that were hidden from view. Data from other rubble-pile asteroids,
including pieces of Bennu delivered to Earth in 2023 by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft, and laboratory experiments helped
refine the estimate.
“We estimated that this hidden material accounted for almost 45% of the plume’s
total mass,” said Timothy Stubbs, a planetary scientist at NASA Goddard who was
involved with the study.
While DART showed that a high-speed collision with a spacecraft can change an
asteroid’s trajectory, Stubbs and his colleagues note that different asteroid
types, such as those made of stronger, more tightly packed material, might
respond differently to a DART-like impact. “Every time we interact with an
asteroid, we find something that surprises us, so there’s a lot more work to
do,” said Stubbs. “But DART is a big step forward for planetary defense.”
The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, managed
the DART mission and operated the spacecraft for NASA’s Planetary Defense
Coordination Office as a project of the agency’s Planetary Missions Program
Office.
By Nathan Marder, nathan.marder@nasa.gov
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: Close-Up Views of NASA’s DART Impact to Inform Planetary Defense - NASA Science
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