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IRON AND ICE
NASA plans to bring boulder into moon orbit
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 25, 2015


NASA plans to launch a craft to capture a boulder from a nearby asteroid and move it into orbit around the Earth's moon for exploration by astronauts, the space agency said Wednesday.

The mission, to be conducted in the mid-2020s, will help hone the capabilities NASA needs to send humans deeper into space, including to Mars, the agency said.

"The option to retrieve a boulder from an asteroid will have a direct impact on planning for future human missions to deep space and begin a new era of spaceflight," NASA associate administrator Robert Lightfoot said in a statement about the Asteroid Redirect Mission.

An unmanned spacecraft will fly to a nearby asteroid, deploy a robotic arm to take a boulder from its surface, and then make a multi-year journey to put the boulder in orbit around the moon, the agency said.

The craft will use solar electric propulsion for the mission that will test numerous new space navigation techniques, NASA said.

Once the boulder is in orbit, NASA plans to send two astronauts in its Orion spacecraft on a 25-day mission to rendezvous with the unmanned vehicle and study the boulder.

"Astronauts will conduct spacewalks outside Orion to study and collect samples of the asteroid boulder wearing new spacesuits designed for deep space missions," NASA said in a statement.

"Collecting these samples will help astronauts and mission managers determine how best to secure and safely return samples from future Mars missions."

NASA has three possible nearby asteroids picked out for the mission and plans to announce the target body in 2019.


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IRON AND ICE
Unusual Asteroid Suspected of Spinning to Explosion
Mauna Kea HI (SPX) Mar 24, 2015
A team led by astronomers from the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland, recently used the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii to observe and measure a rare class of "active asteroids" that spontaneously emit dust and have been confounding scientists for years. The team was able to measure the rotational speed of one of these objects, suggesting the asteroid spun so fast it burst, ejecti ... read more


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