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Successful Kinetic Impact into an Asteroid for Planetary Defense

Authors :
Daly, R. Terik
Ernst, Carolyn M.
Barnouin, Olivier S.
Chabot, Nancy L.
Rivkin, Andrew S.
Cheng, Andrew F.
Adams, Elena Y.
Agrusa, Harrison F.
Abel, Elisabeth D.
Alford, Amy L.
Asphaug, Erik I.
Atchison, Justin A.
Badger, Andrew R.
Baki, Paul
Ballouz, Ronald-L.
Bekker, Dmitriy L.
Bellerose, Julie
Bhaskaran, Shyam
Buratti, Bonnie J.
Cambioni, Saverio
Chen, Michelle H.
Chesley, Steven R.
Chiu, George
Collins, Gareth S.
Cox, Matthew W.
DeCoster, Mallory E.
Ericksen, Peter S.
Espiritu, Raymond C.
Faber, Alan S.
Farnham, Tony L.
Ferrari, Fabio
Fletcher, Zachary J.
Gaskell, Robert W.
Graninger, Dawn M.
Haque, Musad A.
Harrington-Duff, Patricia A.
Hefter, Sarah
Herreros, Isabel
Hirabayashi, Masatoshi
Huang, Philip M.
Hsieh, Syau-Yun W.
Jacobson, Seth A.
Jenkins, Stephen N.
Jensenius, Mark A.
John, Jeremy W.
Jutzi, Martin
Kohout, Tomas
Krueger, Timothy O.
Laipert, Frank E.
Lopez, Norberto R.
Luther, Robert
Lucchetti, Alice
Mages, Declan M.
Marchi, Simone
Martin, Anna C.
McQuaide, Maria E.
Michel, Patrick
Moskovitz, Nicholas A.
Murphy, Ian W.
Murdoch, Naomi
Naidu, Shantanu P.
Nair, Hari
Nolan, Michael C.
Ormö, Jens
Pajola, Maurizio
Palmer, Eric E.
Peachey, James M.
Pravec, Petr
Raducan, Sabina D.
Ramesh, K. T.
Ramirez, Joshua R.
Reynolds, Edward L.
Richman, Joshua E.
Robin, Colas Q.
Rodriguez, Luis M.
Roufberg, Lew M.
Rush, Brian P.
Sawyer, Carolyn A.
Scheeres, Daniel J.
Scheirich, Petr
Schwartz, Stephen R.
Shannon, Matthew P.
Shapiro, Brett N.
Shearer, Caitlin E.
Smith, Evan J.
Steele, R. Joshua
Steckloff, Jordan K
Stickle, Angela M.
Sunshine, Jessica M.
Superfin, Emil A.
Tarzi, Zahi B.
Thomas, Cristina A.
Thomas, Justin R.
Trigo-Rodríguez, Josep M.
Tropf, B. Teresa
Vaughan, Andrew T.
Velez, Dianna
Waller, C. Dany
Wilson, Daniel S.
Wortman, Kristin A.
Zhang, Yun
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

While no known asteroid poses a threat to Earth for at least the next century, the catalog of near-Earth asteroids is incomplete for objects whose impacts would produce regional devastation. Several approaches have been proposed to potentially prevent an asteroid impact with Earth by deflecting or disrupting an asteroid. A test of kinetic impact technology was identified as the highest priority space mission related to asteroid mitigation. NASA's Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission is the first full-scale test of kinetic impact technology. The mission's target asteroid was Dimorphos, the secondary member of the S-type binary near-Earth asteroid (65803) Didymos. This binary asteroid system was chosen to enable ground-based telescopes to quantify the asteroid deflection caused by DART's impact. While past missions have utilized impactors to investigate the properties of small bodies those earlier missions were not intended to deflect their targets and did not achieve measurable deflections. Here we report the DART spacecraft's autonomous kinetic impact into Dimorphos and reconstruct the impact event, including the timeline leading to impact, the location and nature of the DART impact site, and the size and shape of Dimorphos. The successful impact of the DART spacecraft with Dimorphos and the resulting change in Dimorphos's orbit demonstrates that kinetic impactor technology is a viable technique to potentially defend Earth if necessary.<br />Comment: Accepted by Nature

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2303.02248
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-05810-5