Space Industry and Business News
IRON AND ICE
Imagine walking on Hera's asteroid
File illustration Lockheed Martin's hypothetical 'Plymouth Rock' mission to a small asteroid using two Orion spacecraft.
Imagine walking on Hera's asteroid
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Jul 02, 2023

September NASA's DART mission returned images of the boulder-strewn Dimorphos moonlet just before impacting it, in an audacious and ultimately successful attempt to shift its orbit around its parent asteroid Didymos.

Following on from DART, Hera will carry with it a pair of shoebox-sized 'CubeSats' that conclude their own observations by landing on Dimorphos. Team members have been using DART images to help visualise this process of touchdown. And in the process they can't help but imagine: what would it be like for human explorers to one day follow in these CubeSats' footsteps?

Rocky horror
"The boulders covering the surface of Dimorphos are much bigger than they might look," says planetary scientist Naomi Murdoch of ISAE-Supaero in France, working on the CubeSat landings. "At around 5-7 m across, the largest ones are typically house-sized."

This assemblage of outsize rocks is a possible clue to the formation of Dimorphos. Its parent asteroid Didymos might well have spun sufficiently fast at some point in its past that material was flung off to collect in orbit. Supporting this theory, Didymos is shaped like a spinning top, with portions of its surface appearing swept clear of boulders.

Naomi explains: "Moving across these boulders would likely involve much more climbing and jumping than walking. Be careful though - jump too fast and you might never come down again, because you could exceed the local escape velocity. Plus in the ultra-low gravity environment it would be easy to generate significant ground motion, potentially triggering an avalanche of rocks."

Sink or shoot
Patrick Michel, Director of de Research at Observatoire de la Cote d'Azur and Hera's Principal Investigator adds: "A lot depends on whether its material is hard or soft, which would determine how high an astronaut might bounce, or else sink. On the asteroid Bennu, visited by NASA's OSIRIS-REx, you would clearly sink if you landed too hard. On a harder body just 6 cm per second of upward motion might be enough to send you into orbit."

Dimorphos, at 160 m across is about the same size as the Great Pyramid of Giza, orbiting around the mountain sized Didymos asteroid, about 780-m across. DART's impact with the Dimorphos asteroid shifted its orbit around Didymos as well as casting debris thousands of kilometres across space. The current estimate is that about 1 000 tonnes of debris were blasted away, enough to fill 60 train carriages. Next, in October 2024, ESA's Hera mission will begin its own journey to Dimorphos, to gather close-up data including the size of the impact crater and the asteroid's mineral make-up and mass.

Hera will also deploy two '6-unit' CubeSats for additional observations: Juventas will perform the first radar probe of an asteroid's interior while Milani will carry out mineral prospecting with its hyperspectral imager. Both CubeSats are also equipped with instruments to gather surface data once they land: Juventas has a gravimeter to make gravity field measurements while both Juventas and Milani have accelerometers to acquire details of their likely initial bounces, to reconstruct surface characteristics.

Designing for ultra-low gravity
The CubeSat deployment has been designed around the fundamental fact that Dimorphos's gravity levels are less than a millionth of Earth's. So the pair will be released from Hera at a velocity of just a few centimetres per second - any faster and they would risk escaping the asteroid's feeble gravity and being lost in space. The MINERVA lander of Japan's Hayabusa mission was lost in a similar manner when it was deployed in the wrong direction, as it attempted to land on the Itokawa asteroid in 2005.

Accordingly, any human astronaut would probably either use spikes and crampons to anchor themselves onto the surface, or else a thruster unit to glide over the surface - like a scuba diver exploring a coral reef.

"You would want to avoid contact with surface rocks while gliding however, as they are likely to be sharp enough to snag your spacesuit, having never been smoothed by water or wind," says Naomi. "Adding to the challenge, your weight would shift by about 10-20% depending on where you are on the surface, because of tidal forces from the Didymos parent asteroid."

Navigation would present another difficulty, comments Patrick: "It is likely Dimorphos was tidally locked before DART's impact, but is now probably either rotating or 'librating' - wobbling - as it orbits Didymos." Either way, this means the local sky above an exploring astronaut would probably be shifting all the time, and disorientation might become a risk.

Short but useful surface lifetime
Hera's CubeSats will first carry out their primary missions - steering around Dimorphos using cold gas thrusters - before touching down on the asteroid. Juventas's gravimeter has been designed to operate on the surface independently of its orientation on landing: assuming for instance it falls upside down, or between boulders, it will go on working for the approximately 20-hour lifetime of its battery. Milani's accelerometers will record the force of its bounces as it comes down to the surface, gathering further data on the weak gravity field of Dimorphos. Results from both CubeSats will be gathered by Hera via its inter-satellite links.

Hera is due to be launched in October 2024, to arrive at Didymos and Dimorphos just over two years later.

Related Links
Hera at ESA
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
IRON AND ICE
OSIRIS-REx asteroid sample will have new home in Houston
Houston TX (SPX) Jun 21, 2023
If everything goes according to plan, OSIRIS-REx's sample return capsule will separate from the spacecraft, enter the Earth's atmosphere and parachute safely to Earth for recovery at the Department of Defense's Utah Test and Training Range, located about 70 miles west of Salt Lake City. "The OSIRIS-REx curation team is excitedly preparing for the Bennu samples," said Nicole Lunning, OSIRIS-REx lead sample curator at Johnson. The rocks and dust, called regolith, were collected from Bennu's surface ... read more

IRON AND ICE
Solving the RIME deployment mystery

A quantitative analysis of the in-orbit collision risks

EU 'concerned' about China's curbs on rare metals

iQPS initiates a full-scale study to leverage SkyCompass-1 optical data relay service

IRON AND ICE
SYRACUSE 4B Satellite Launched: Boost for French Military Communications

ATLAS Space launches Freedom Space for Government Missions

DoD awards Global X-Band Blanket Purchase Agreement to SES

Ensuring reliable communications between US and Partners at the tactical edge

IRON AND ICE
IRON AND ICE
Northrop Grumman's new airborne navigation system achieves successful flight test

Fugro and GomSpace deliver world class position and timing accuracy onboard LEO satellites

GMV to head up Galileo ground segment after securing a new contract

LEO PNT satellite signal simulator debuts at JNC 2023 conference

IRON AND ICE
Europe-wide space-enabled aviation approaches take off

DLR project HorizonUAM provides answers

US Air Force suspends personnel moves, bonuses over funding shortfall

Czech Republic to provide helicopters, F-16 training to Ukraine

IRON AND ICE
Researchers grow precise arrays of nanoLEDs

Foxconn pulls from $19.4 bn deal in India to make semiconductors

China unveils new operating system amid US tensions

Superconducting qubit foundry accelerates progress in quantum research

IRON AND ICE
Teledyne e2v Space Imaging celebrates the success of its sensors as Aeolus de-orbits

Satellogic and OHB to collaborate on environmental earth observation applications

Huangshan dialogue advances sustainable development of heritage sites

Australia scraps billion-dollar satellite program

IRON AND ICE
Rubbish-clearing divers come to rescue of 'pearl of Kyrgyzstan'

Hazardous 'forever chemicals' detected in nearly half of US tap water

Trial over Spanish ecological disaster starts, 25 years on

Time to act on light pollution, say leading experts at NAM conference

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.