Deep Impact Spacecraft Zips Past Earth
Posted on: Tuesday, 1 January 2008, 09:20 CST
LOS ANGELES -- A comet-busting NASA spacecraft zipped past Earth on Monday on its way to rendezvous with another comet in an extended mission that will also see it hunt for Earth-sized planets around a cluster of stars. The Deep Impact probe made the first of three flybys designed to use the planet's gravity to hurtle the spacecraft toward comet Hartley 2 for a 2010 meeting.
At its closest, the spacecraft was 10,000 miles above Australia.
"We're taking laps around the sun until the comet comes," said William Blume of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
In 2005, Deep Impact became the first spacecraft to crack open a comet by releasing a copper impactor that smashed into Tempel 1, giving scientists their first glimpse of the interior. The mothership survived and was placed in safe mode before it was tapped for an encore.
The new mission, known as Epoxi, calls for Deep Impact to meet Hartley 2 about 12 million miles from Earth at the time of the encounter. Deep Impact will hover 550 miles from the half mile-wide surface and use its two telescopes and infrared spectrometer to map features and record gas outbursts.
On its way to the comet, Deep Impact will spend six months using one of its telescopes to search for Earth-sized planets around five nearby stars, which are known to have Jupiter-like planets orbiting them.
The extended mission, managed by JPL in Pasadena, cost $40 million, compared to the $333 million it took to collide with Tempel 1.
NASA initially wanted Deep Impact's second act to be an exploration of comet 85P/Boethin in 2008. But to scientists' surprise, a bevy of ground and space telescopes were unable to spot it this fall. Astronomers believe the comet may have shattered into specks too small to be seen from Earth.
Mission managers then asked the space agency to change course and visit Hartley 2 - which required a path correction and an extra two years of travel.
---
On the Net:
Epoxi mission: http://epoxi.umd.edu
Deep Impact mission: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/deepimpact/main/index.html
Source: By ALICIA CHANG/AP
Related Articles
- Deep Impact and Other Spacecraft Find Clear Evidence of Water on Moon
- Hydrocarbons In The Deep Earth?
- Natural Deep Earth Pump Fuels Earthquakes And Ore
- Titan 24 Deep Earth Imaging Identifies Large Target Areas
- Comet Missions Prove Life Began in Space
- Study Reconciles Long-standing Contradiction of Deep-earth Dynamics
- Comet Mission's Success Sets Stage for Shuttle Flight
- Just How Earth-like is the Newest Planet?
- Stardust Comet Mission Jets Millions of Miles
- Lockheed Gets $6m To Design Spacecraft ; Nasa Nuclear Orbiter To Search For Oceans On 3 Jupiter Moons
User Comments (0)


RSS Feeds