• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Smithsonian
    Journeys
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Smithsonian
    magazine

AirSpaceMag.com

  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Need to Know
  • How Things Work
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • Space Exploration

Destination: Asteroid

After four years of spiraling out from Earth, the Dawn spacecraft closes in on its first target.

| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email | More
  • By Tom Jones
  • Air & Space magazine, July 2011
View Full Image »
Vesta looms in this artists view. Dawns ion drive is weak but chemical engines arent efficient enough to reach two asteroids Vesta looms in this artist’s view. Dawn’s ion drive is weak, but chemical engines aren’t efficient enough to reach two asteroids.

Mid-Continent Research For Education And Learning

Video Gallery

Vesta in 3-D

NASA's Dawn spacecraft surveys the asteroid Vesta.



We’ve seen asteroids up close before, but none like these two. “These aren’t little chips of rock. We’re talking about charting the last unexplored worlds in the inner solar system.” So says Marc Rayman of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, the chief engineer and mission manager for Dawn—the first mission to probe the mysteries of the main belt asteroids, located between Mars and Jupiter.

Other spacecraft have visited asteroids closer to Earth, and a few have swept past main belt objects on their way to somewhere else. But none has stayed for a thorough, close investigation. Dawn will. Nearly four years after its September 2007 launch, with only half its xenon propellant expended, the $266 million spacecraft is finally nearing the first of its two targets, the enigmatic asteroid 4 Vesta.

To the scientists looking at data sent from the spacecraft over the past few months, the images of the 330-mile-wide asteroid have grown in size and brightness as Dawn closes in at a relative velocity of 1,500 mph. By early June, Dawn’s camera will be close enough to take pictures of Vesta that surpass even Hubble’s best shots.

Pushed by a steady stream of ionized xenon gas—the low-thrust propulsion that makes this multi-target mission possible—the spacecraft will match orbits with Vesta in late July. As the relative velocity slows to 110 mph about 9,900 miles out, Vesta’s weak gravitational field will swing Dawn into a looping 10-day orbit over the asteroid’s poles. Another month of gentle ion thrust will spiral the orbit down to within 110 miles of the surface. By then the Dawn imager will resolve details on Vesta as small as 25 feet, while a visible and infrared spectrometer maps the asteroid’s mineral composition.

Both of Dawn’s targets are big (600-mile-wide Ceres was recently re-classified as a dwarf planet, like Pluto), and both were discovered more than 200 years ago. But we still don’t know much about them.

For Dawn’s international science team (the framing camera is German-built; the imaging spectrometer, from Italy; the nuclear spectrometer, from Los Alamos, New Mexico), the mission is like traveling back to the era of planet formation, 4.6 billion years ago. The Dawn researchers hope to learn more about the physical and chemical processes that gave rise to the rocky inner planets. These two remnant “planetesimals” should provide clues to the violent collisions that shattered nearly every other large object in the asteroid belt, producing some of the building blocks of Earth and its neighbors.

One puzzle Dawn should help to solve is why these two neighboring worlds took such different evolutionary paths. Vesta underwent extensive melting and differentiation, while Ceres, just a bit farther from the sun, stayed cool enough to preserve water ice in its interior even today.

Luckily for scientists, they already have pieces of Vesta—in the form of some 200 “HED” (Howardite-Eucrite-Diogenite) meteorites whose spectral signatures closely match that of Vesta. Shortly after its formation, more than 4.5 billion years ago, the asteroid underwent severe heating, probably from the decay of radioactive elements. A fluid mantle formed, and thick layers of basaltic lava erupted onto the surface. As Vesta cooled, it was pummeled by other asteroids, including one collision that blasted out a gigantic crater about 290 miles across. Hubble images show how this impact sheared off Vesta’s south pole, a cataclysm that sent fragments wandering all the way to Earth. Says Dawn team member and asteroid scientist Lucy McFadden, “Dawn should give us some perspective on that great impact basin, as well as other suspected craters that may have punched through to reveal Vesta’s interior.”

We’ve seen asteroids up close before, but none like these two. “These aren’t little chips of rock. We’re talking about charting the last unexplored worlds in the inner solar system.” So says Marc Rayman of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, the chief engineer and mission manager for Dawn—the first mission to probe the mysteries of the main belt asteroids, located between Mars and Jupiter.

Other spacecraft have visited asteroids closer to Earth, and a few have swept past main belt objects on their way to somewhere else. But none has stayed for a thorough, close investigation. Dawn will. Nearly four years after its September 2007 launch, with only half its xenon propellant expended, the $266 million spacecraft is finally nearing the first of its two targets, the enigmatic asteroid 4 Vesta.

To the scientists looking at data sent from the spacecraft over the past few months, the images of the 330-mile-wide asteroid have grown in size and brightness as Dawn closes in at a relative velocity of 1,500 mph. By early June, Dawn’s camera will be close enough to take pictures of Vesta that surpass even Hubble’s best shots.

Pushed by a steady stream of ionized xenon gas—the low-thrust propulsion that makes this multi-target mission possible—the spacecraft will match orbits with Vesta in late July. As the relative velocity slows to 110 mph about 9,900 miles out, Vesta’s weak gravitational field will swing Dawn into a looping 10-day orbit over the asteroid’s poles. Another month of gentle ion thrust will spiral the orbit down to within 110 miles of the surface. By then the Dawn imager will resolve details on Vesta as small as 25 feet, while a visible and infrared spectrometer maps the asteroid’s mineral composition.

Both of Dawn’s targets are big (600-mile-wide Ceres was recently re-classified as a dwarf planet, like Pluto), and both were discovered more than 200 years ago. But we still don’t know much about them.

For Dawn’s international science team (the framing camera is German-built; the imaging spectrometer, from Italy; the nuclear spectrometer, from Los Alamos, New Mexico), the mission is like traveling back to the era of planet formation, 4.6 billion years ago. The Dawn researchers hope to learn more about the physical and chemical processes that gave rise to the rocky inner planets. These two remnant “planetesimals” should provide clues to the violent collisions that shattered nearly every other large object in the asteroid belt, producing some of the building blocks of Earth and its neighbors.

One puzzle Dawn should help to solve is why these two neighboring worlds took such different evolutionary paths. Vesta underwent extensive melting and differentiation, while Ceres, just a bit farther from the sun, stayed cool enough to preserve water ice in its interior even today.

Luckily for scientists, they already have pieces of Vesta—in the form of some 200 “HED” (Howardite-Eucrite-Diogenite) meteorites whose spectral signatures closely match that of Vesta. Shortly after its formation, more than 4.5 billion years ago, the asteroid underwent severe heating, probably from the decay of radioactive elements. A fluid mantle formed, and thick layers of basaltic lava erupted onto the surface. As Vesta cooled, it was pummeled by other asteroids, including one collision that blasted out a gigantic crater about 290 miles across. Hubble images show how this impact sheared off Vesta’s south pole, a cataclysm that sent fragments wandering all the way to Earth. Says Dawn team member and asteroid scientist Lucy McFadden, “Dawn should give us some perspective on that great impact basin, as well as other suspected craters that may have punched through to reveal Vesta’s interior.”

After a year studying Vesta, Dawn will use its ion engine to spiral up and out of orbit, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit one solar system body, then leave to orbit another. It should reach Ceres in 2015, where it will confront another mystery. Orbiting almost three times Earth’s distance from the sun, Ceres probably incorporated large amounts of water ice during its formation. Ground-based observations still show water trapped inside clay minerals on the asteroid’s surface, and models suggest that Ceres harbors a layer of ice or even liquid water beneath its solid crust.

During this six-month phase of the mission, Dawn co-investigator Mark Sykes will be looking, he says, for “signs that interior water is escaping onto Ceres’ dark surface. If we find indications of a subsurface ocean, it may exhibit the right chemical and thermal conditions for life. And then Ceres becomes an astrobiological target for exploration.” In other words, a place to look for signs of life.

The notion of a watery Ceres raises one last intriguing possibility. We won’t be sending astronauts there anytime soon, but the object’s water-rich splinters—which roam the inner solar system as near-Earth asteroids—could furnish propellants for future astronaut and robot expeditions. Dawn’s first close look at Vesta and Ceres, says Sykes, “takes asteroids out of the ‘Chicken Little’ realm”—where they’re seen only as threats—and enables us to picture using them someday as resources that “can leverage our future beyond Earth.”

Former astronaut Tom Jones would still like to head an expedition to an asteroid, but takes comfort in the certainty that asteroids are surely coming to us.


Single Page 1 2 Next »


| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email | More
 
Comments (1)

Be sure to check out Google Mars for more signs of life.

Posted by georgeof420 on June 16,2011 | 06:08 PM

Post a Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.



Advertisement


Most Popular

  • Viewed
  • Emailed
  • Commented
  • Topics
  1. The Navy Gets a Panther
  2. Bush Pilot Hall of Fame
  3. Where Have All the Shuttle Engineers Gone?
  4. Area 51: Origins
  5. Inside a Flying Fortress
  6. Alaska’s Crash Epidemic
  7. Earth-Like Planets Could be Right Next Door
  8. The Plane With No Name
  9. Panthers At Sea
  10. Driving the Space Shuttle
  1. Where Have All the Shuttle Engineers Gone?
  2. Area 51: Origins
  3. The Navy Gets a Panther
  4. Inside a Flying Fortress
  5. The Galileo Project
  6. When Pigs Could Fly
  7. The Soplata Airplane Sanctuary
  1. Earth-Like Planets Could be Right Next Door
  2. The Navy Gets a Panther
  3. Refueling Angel Thunder
  4. Bush Pilot Hall of Fame
  5. Wings & Waves Airshow
  6. The Rocket Ships
  7. The 727 that Vanished
  8. Yellow 10
  9. Hush Kits
  10. The Mystery of the Lost Clipper
  1. Fighters
  2. Vietnam War
  3. Bombers
  4. 21st Century Aviation
  5. Cold War Era
  6. Aerospace Inventions
  7. 20th Century Aviation
  8. Experimental Aircraft
  9. Golden Age of Flight
  10. Airplane Restoration
  11. Military Aviators

View All Most Popular »

Advertisement


Follow Us

Air & Space Magazine
@airspacemag
Follow Air & Space Magazine on Twitter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

Popular Videos

  • Newest
  • Most Viewed

Flightseeing on Mount McKinley

(01:46)

A New Way to Navigate

(02:01)

X-47B Carrier Launch

(01:25)

SpaceShipTwo Fires Up

(02:58)

View All Newest Videos »

The Mach-2 Bomber That Never Was

(01:21)

SpaceShipTwo Fires Up

(02:58)

X-47B Carrier Launch

(01:25)

A New Way to Navigate

(02:01)

View All Videos »

In the Magazine

July 2013

  • Where Have All the Shuttle Engineers Gone?
  • Panthers At Sea
  • Earth-Like Planets Could be Right Next Door
  • Alaska and the Airplane
  • The Pilots of Mount McKinley

View Table of Contents »

Snapshot

There's No Upside-Down

An astronaut takes a walk out in space last week.

Reader Scrapbook

Discovery's Tail-Cone Fitting

Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.


Smithsonian Store

In the Cockpit and In the Cockpit II

Current and retired curators from our National Air and Space Museum contribute the insightful text and striking images... $48.99

Smithsonian Journeys

Smithsonian at Chautauqua: The Elegant Universe

Join us in western New York and explore the mysteries of the cosmos with experts (Jun 22 - 29, 2013)




View full archiveRecent Issues


  • Jul 2013


  • May 2013


  • Mar 2013

Newsletter

Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

Subscribe Now

About Us

Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

Explore our Brands

  • goSmithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
  • Smithsonian Student Travel
  • Smithsonian Catalogue
  • Smithsonian Journeys
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • About Air & Space
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscribe
  • RSS
  • Topics
  • Member Services
  • Copyright
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ad Choices

Smithsonian Institution