Incredible moment Nasa probe lands on ‘doomsday asteroid’ Bennu to collect biggest Space sample since Apollo
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NASA's OSIRIS-REX spacecraft briefly touched down on the asteroid Bennu on Tuesday evening, tagging the surface as part of a collection mission that's been 16 years in the making.
It is hoped that the any dirt collected will help with future research into our solar system – including how to potentially prevent an asteroid crashing into Earth.
The spacecraft made contact with the surface of Bennu shortly after 11pm GMT.
It is hoped that NASA will know by Saturday whether the extraction has been successful.
Any materials collected could help unlock secrets into how our solar system was formed 4.5 billion years ago.
Last December, scientists selected the sample site known as Nightingale – a fairly smooth patch on what is an asteroid strewn with boulders.
Measuring roughly 20 feet wide and is the size of an SUV, OSIRIS-REX was tasked with navigating a target site of just 26 feet in diameter.
The mission has been 16 years in the making and was led by University of Arizona researchers.
The touchdown happened over 200 million miles away from Earth.
Bennu itself is travelling through space at a speed of 63,000 miles per hour.
Once landed, the spacecraft released an 11-foot-long robotic arm to collect a small sample of rubble.
Ahead of the landing, NASA scientists said it could take some time before they can identify just how much material has been collected.
It will be flown back to Earth in 2023 if the sample is good enough and is expected to arrive in 2023.
We should then be able to unravel some of the mystery surrounding the asteroid and its origins.
The mission is uncharted territory, though, so smooth sailing is not guaranteed.
Ancient asteroid Bennu contains the ingredients for life, according to Nasa experts.
Ahead of the sampling, experts have been piecing together what they think they know so far about the near Earth asteroid.
Nasa : "NASA’s first asteroid sample return mission now knows much more about the material it’ll be collecting in just a few weeks.
"In a special collection of six papers published today in the journals Science and Science Advances, scientists on the OSIRIS-REx mission present new findings on asteroid Bennu’s surface material, geological characteristics, and dynamic history.
"They also suspect that the delivered sample of Bennu may be unlike anything we have in the meteorite collection on Earth."
The researchers relied on high resolution mapping that has been done around Bennu since a spacecraft began to orbit it back in 2018.
It's hoped that their work will fill in crucial gaps in our understanding of asteroids.
Nasa claims Bennu hosts ingredients that we know are essential for life on Earth.
It : "One of the papers, led by Amy Simon from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, shows that carbon-bearing, organic material is widespread on the asteroid’s surface, including at the mission’s primary sample site, Nightingale, where OSIRIS-REx will make its first sample collection attempt on October 20.
"These findings indicate that hydrated minerals and organic material will likely be present in the collected sample.
"This organic matter may contain carbon in a form often found in biology or in compounds associated with biology.
"Scientists are planning detailed experiments on these organic molecules and expect that the returned sample will help answer complex questions about the origins of water and life on Earth."
There is a theory that life on Earth started because of an asteroid impact bringing water and the right organic molecules.
There's also slight concern that an asteroid like Bennu could end lives on Earth.
Bennu is a possible security risk for our planet as there's a 1 in 2,700 chance it could collide with us in the 2100s.
This may be a slim chance but it makes studying the asteroid even more important.
Bright 'veins' on the asteroid's boulders are also being used to suggest Bennu formed when a larger watery asteroid was smashed into and broken up.
The water could have created the veins and left behind the patterns we can still see today.
Here's what you need to know
In other news, Elon Musk says his Starship rocket could fly to Mars in just over three years.
The Orionid meteor shower reaches its peak this week.
And, a Nasa rocket launched to the Moon in 1966 has hurtled back into view from Earth, according to scientists.
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