Author Topic: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu  (Read 346 times)

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Offline Buster's Uncle

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Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about a distant asteroid
Jeff Parsons - 2h ago
Metro



The surface of a distant asteroid has provided Nasa with an ‘astonishing’ insight.



© Provided by Metro
The asteroid Bennu, pictured by the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft. (Credits: AP)



The US space agency has been analysing ‘astonishing’ data collected from a mission to the Bennu asteroid, a 500-metre wide monster about 200 million miles away from us.

Thanks to the efforts of the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft back in 2020, Nasa experts have been learning all they can about an asteroid that has a 1 in 2,700-chance of striking Earth between 2175 and 2199.

OSIRIS-REx won’t physically return to Earth until 2023, but in the meantime, scientists have been studying what they can from the mission data.

And according to research published this week, the spacecraft would likely have sunk into the surface of the asteroid had it not blasted off promptly to begin the return journey to Earth.

That’s because, Nasa says, the particles that make up the exterior of the Bennu asteroid are far less closely bound than we first thought.



© Provided by Metro
This photo shows the sampling arm of the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft during a rehearsal for an approach to the ‘Nightingale’ sample site on the surface of the asteroid. (Credits: AP)



The space agency explained the surface of the asteroid is so loosely bound that if a person were to step onto Bennu they would feel very little resistance.

It would be like ‘stepping into a pit of plastic balls’ that you may find at a child’s play area.

‘If Bennu was completely packed, that would imply nearly solid rock, but we found a lot of void space in the surface,’ said Kevin Walsh, a member of the OSIRIS-REx science team from Southwest Research Institute, which is based in San Antonio.

As Nasa explains, these results ‘add to the intrigue that has kept scientists on the edge of their seats throughout the OSIRIS-REx mission.’

Adding that: ‘Bennu has proved consistently unpredictable.’

To reach their conclusions, mission scientists analysed the volume of debris visible in before and after images of the sample site, dubbed ‘Nightingale.’

They also looked at acceleration data collected during the spacecraft’s touch down. This data revealed that as OSIRIS-REx touched the asteroid it experienced the same amount of resistance – very little – a person would feel while squeezing the plunger on a French press coffee carafe.



© Provided by Metro
The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft will return to Earth with its sample in 2023. (Credit: Nasa)



‘By the time we fired our thrusters to leave the surface we were still plunging into the asteroid,’ said Ron Ballouz, an OSIRIS-REx scientist based at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.

Ballouz and the research team ran hundreds of computer simulations to deduce Bennu’s density and cohesion based on spacecraft images and acceleration information.

It’s believed Bennu may contain the building blocks of life, so recovering a sample will allow scientists to test a theory that asteroids carried vital chemicals to Earth which sparked the genesis of living organisms.

But the behemoth could also bring death on a gigantic scale, so the tests will also help to understand our nemesis and how to make sure it doesn’t hit us.



© Provided by Metro
If the asteroid hit us, it would release more energy than all the nuclear weapons in history (Credit: Getty)



If a disastrous impact came to pass, it would release more energy than all the nuclear weapons detonated in the entirety of human history.

Bennu is as wide as five football fields and weighs around 79 billion kilograms, which is 1,664 times heavier than the Titanic.

Thankfully there’s really very good odds that it won’t come to that; so there’s probably no need to worry unduly for your great, great grandchildren’s safety.


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/nasa-reveals-astonishing-discovery-about-a-distant-asteroid

Offline Unorthodox

Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2022, 01:48:54 PM »
I've always been kinda curious why we don't see more of this kind of thing, with a bigger body collecting aggregate.  But maybe we just haven't visited enough asteroids to really make that judgement and this is more the norm that we need to adjust perception for. 

Offline Geo

Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #2 on: July 12, 2022, 06:25:03 PM »
I also wonder how discoveries like this (asteroids being a loose pile of rubble) affects all those mining plans envisioned at the dawn of the space age.
I mean, if your equipment simply sinks through the rubble all the time...

Offline Buster's Uncle

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Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #3 on: July 12, 2022, 07:39:30 PM »
I don't imagine anything happening promptly at that low percent of G.

Offline Unorthodox

Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #4 on: July 14, 2022, 01:55:50 PM »
I also wonder how discoveries like this (asteroids being a loose pile of rubble) affects all those mining plans envisioned at the dawn of the space age.
I mean, if your equipment simply sinks through the rubble all the time...

I've never really read terribly much into the astro-mining theories but it might actually make it EASIER if all ya gotta do is scoop things up.  Guess it depends on what they're wanting to mine.  Not terribly sold on the whole astro-mining thing myself from a usable/profitable metals mining perspective.  Useful compound and water mining, sure.  orbiting forges and manufacturing plants to use metals?   once in place that would be extremely useful.   Getting to that point is $$$

Returning mined metals to earth?  what a waste. 

Offline Geo

Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #5 on: July 15, 2022, 10:17:35 AM »
Returning mined metals to earth?  what a waste.


In most cases gravity could do most of the trick.
Of course, I'm more thinking in using mined asteroid metals in orbit of Earth (or other space locations), rather then shipping it down to the surface.

Offline Unorthodox

Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #6 on: July 18, 2022, 07:02:32 PM »
Returning mined metals to earth?  what a waste.




In most cases gravity could do most of the trick.
Of course, I'm more thinking in using mined asteroid metals in orbit of Earth (or other space locations), rather then shipping it down to the surface.

Right, my point about returning to earth being a waste is most of the value is really that it's already in space. 

I don't really see refining in space being feasible any time soon.  I mean, I get the concept of 3d printing with the mined metals, don't get me wrong, I'm just not seeing the energy required to smelt and refine the stuff being so simple to achieve in orbit. 

Offline Geo

Re: Nasa reveals 'astonishing' discovery about distant asteroid Bennu
« Reply #7 on: July 18, 2022, 07:54:20 PM »
I don't really see refining in space being feasible any time soon.  I mean, I get the concept of 3d printing with the mined metals, don't get me wrong, I'm just not seeing the energy required to smelt and refine the stuff being so simple to achieve in orbit.


True that. There already needs to be infrastructure in place, not to mention the lack of gravity so other methods for refining are probably necessary. And I can't imagine any and all energy produced/collected in orbit being sent down to Earth.

 

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