Tuesday, April 2, 2024

OSIRIS-REx Team Wins '24 Armstrong Award, At NASA -- Extended Mission Well Underway!


This was an astonishingly precise feat of engineering, with no "do overs". [At right is the December 2023 graphic for the now extended mission -- below is the landing of the capsule with Bennu dust in tow, from October of 2023.] So while we celebrate what was already accomplished, we wish to remind that this mission is extended through 2029, now -- under the derivative name at right.

Success breeds. . . success. And this was a jaw-slackingly great one! Do go read all about it, here -- from Goddard Spaceflight / NASA:

. . .The OSIRIS-REx team includes members from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland; Lockheed Martin in Littleton, Colorado; the University of Arizona, Tucson; and KinetX in Tempe, Arizona.

OSIRIS-REx launched Sept. 8, 2016, and the mission had to overcome many obstacles on its seven-year journey to Bennu and back.

“Bennu’s small size presented unprecedented challenges for the team to navigate safely near the asteroid,” said Michael Moreau, OSIRIS-REx deputy project manager at NASA Goddard. “In addition to these known challenges, Bennu threw a number of curveballs during the mission’s encounter between 2019-2020.”

The asteroid presented its first surprise in December 2018 when NASA’s spacecraft arrived at Bennu. The OSIRIS-REx team found a surface littered with boulders, and no areas in which the spacecraft could safely touch down to collect a sample unless navigation performance was improved significantly over what was designed before launch. The team also discovered that Bennu was ejecting particles of rock into space.

Despite the challenges, on Oct. 20, 2020, OSIRIS-REx descended to the surface of asteroid Bennu, touched down within three feet from the targeted point, collected a sample, delivering it to Earth on Sept. 24, 2023. The 4.29 ounces (121.6 grams) ultimately collected represents the largest asteroid sample ever collected in space and over twice the mission’s mass requirement. . . .


Now you know:



नमस्ते

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