NASA is preparing for a flight to the metallic asteroid

NASA is preparing for a flight to the metallic asteroid Psyche – TVA Nouvelles

NASA will launch a mission Friday to the distant asteroid Psyche, a previously unexplored metal world that scientists believe may be the core of an ancient celestial body.

The Psyche probe is scheduled to launch at 10:19 a.m. from Kennedy Space Center in Florida aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.

But the weather promises to be capricious, as the chance of favorable weather for the start is only 40%. If necessary, a new shooting opportunity is planned for Saturday.

Humanity has already visited worlds made of rock, ice or gas. But “this will be the first time we visit a world that has a metallic surface,” Lindy Elkins-Tanton, the mission’s science director, said at a news conference.


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The road there will be long: Psyche lies in the outer part of the asteroid belt, between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. NASA’s probe will travel around 3.5 million kilometers to get there. The arrival date is planned for summer 2029.

Thanks to the light reflected from its surface, scientists know that Psyche is very dense, made of metal and another material – perhaps rock.

But “we don’t know what psyche looks like,” the researcher explained. “I often joke that it’s shaped like a potato, because potatoes come in many different shapes, so I’m not wrong,” she laughed.


AFP

Scientists believe that the more than 200 km long Psyche could be the core of an ancient celestial body whose surface was torn away by asteroid impacts.

Like Mars, Venus or Mercury, Earth has a metallic core. But “we’ll never see those cores, it’s way too hot, way too deep,” said Lindy Elkins-Tanton. The mission to the psyche is therefore “our only opportunity to see a core”.

Psyche emerged about 4.5 billion years ago, at the birth of our solar system. Volcanic eruptions may have occurred, leaving traces in the form of ancient lava flows.

Then, as Psyche cooled, its contraction may have caused giant cracks to form.

Scientists are also curious to see what the craters look like on a metallic celestial body: The material thrown by the asteroid impact could have remained frozen in the air, forming points, so to speak.


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The probe will remain in orbit around Psyche for just over two years, alternating between different altitudes.

Three scientific instruments will be used: multispectral imagers to photograph it, spectrometers to determine its composition and magnetometers to measure its magnetic field.

To move, the probe will also use Hall effect thrusters, a first for interplanetary travel.

These motors use the power provided by the probe’s solar panels to harvest ions of a noble gas (xenon gas), which are then accelerated by passing through an electric field. These are then ejected at very high speeds, “five times faster than the fuel that comes out of a conventional rocket,” said NASA engineer David Oh. Which provides the necessary boost.

“It’s something you’ve heard in Star Wars and Star Trek, but now we’re making the future a reality,” he said.

The Psyche mission will also test a communications system using lasers that will allow more data to be transmitted than radio.