NASA
is Going to Catch Asteroids
This conceptual image
shows NASA’s Orion spacecraft approaching
the robotic asteroid capture vehicle. The
trip from Earth to the captured asteroid
will take Orion and its two-person crew an
estimated nine days. Image released Aug. 22,
2013. Credit: NASA
NASA's FY2014 budget
proposal includes a plan to robotically
capture a small near-Earth asteroid and
redirect it safely to a stable orbit in the
Earth-moon system where astronauts can visit
and explore it.
Performing these elements for the proposed
asteroid initiative integrates the best of
NASA's science, technology and human
exploration capabilities and draws on the
innovation of America's brightest scientists
and engineers. It uses current and developing
capabilities to find both large asteroids that
pose a hazard to Earth and small asteroids
that could be candidates for the initiative,
accelerates our technology development
activities in high-powered solar electric
propulsion and takes advantage of our hard
work on the Space Launch System rocket and
Orion spacecraft, helping to keep NASA on
target to reach the President's goal of
sending humans to Mars in the 2030s.
When astronauts don their spacesuits and
venture out for a spacewalk on the surface of
an asteroid, how they move and take samples of
it will be based on years of knowledge built
by NASA scientists and engineers who have
assembled and operated the International Space
Station, evaluated exploration mission
concepts, sent scientific spacecraft to
characterize near-Earth objects and performed
ground-based analog missions.
This
image represents a notional spacecraft with
its asteroid capture mechanism deployed.
Image
Credit: NASA/Advanced Concepts Laboratory
As early as the 1970s, NASA examined potential
ways to use existing hardware to visit an
asteroid to understand better its
characteristics. On the International Space
Station, scientific investigations and
technology demonstrations are improving
knowledge of how humans can live and work in
space. The agency also has examined many
possible mission concepts to help define what
capabilities are needed to push the boundaries
of space exploration.
› More: The Long and Storied Path to Human
Asteroid Exploration
During the early space shuttle flights and
through assembly of the space station, NASA
has relied on testing both in space and on
Earth to try out ideas through a host of
analog missions, or field tests, that simulate
the complexity of endeavors in space.
Through 16 missions in the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's underwater
Aquarius Reef Base off the coast of Key Largo,
Fla., aquanauts have tested techniques for
human space exploration. These underwater
tests have been built upon the experience
gained by training astronauts in the Neutral
Buoyancy Laboratory at NASA's Johnson Space
Center in Houston to assemble and maintain the
space station. The NASA Extreme Environment
Mission Operations (NEEMO) 15 and 16 missions
in 2011 and 2012, respectively, simulated
several challenges explorers will face when
visiting an asteroid, including how to anchor
to and move around the surface of a near-Earth
object and how to collect samples of it.
NASA also has simulated an asteroid mission as
part of its 2012 Research and Technology
Studies ground test at Johnson. During the
simulation, a team evaluated how astronauts
might do a spacewalk on an asteroid and
accomplish other goals. While performing a
spacewalk on a captured asteroid will involve
different techniques than the activities
performed during recent analog exercises,
decisions made about ways to best sample an
asteroid will be informed by the agency's
on-going concept development and past work.
Artist's
concept of a solar electric propulsion
system.
Image Credit: Analytical
Mechanics Associates
Scientific missions also have investigated the
nature of asteroids to provide a glimpse of
the origins of the solar system. From the
Pioneer 10 spacecraft, which in 1972 was the
first to venture into the Main Asteroid Belt,
to the Dawn mission, which recently concluded
its investigations of asteroid Vesta and is on
its way to the dwarf planet Ceres, NASA's
forays help us understand the origins of the
solar system and inform decisions about how to
conduct missions to distant planetary bodies.
Scientists both at NASA and across the world
also continue to study asteroids to shed light
on their unique characteristics.
As NASA ventures farther into the solar
system, the agency continues to simulate and
evaluate operations and technical concepts for
visiting an asteroid.
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