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NASA asteroid mission could explain how life began (and how ours might end)
5/27/2011




There's a slight chance that the Earth could get hit by an asteroid in about 170 years, but don't you worry -- NASA's all over it. This week, the agency announced a new mouthful of a mission known as Origins-Spectral Interpretation-Resource Identification-Security-Regolith Explorer, or OSIRIS-REx, for short. The $800 million initiative, part of NASA's New Frontiers Program, will send a spacecraft to link up with 1999 RQ36 -- a nearby asteroid that's likely rich in carbon and other organic molecules that could explain how life forms originated. After about four years of space travel, the craft should get close enough to map the asteroid's surface, before using its robotic arm to extract at least two ounces of substance and return it to Earth by 2023. Scientists will also pay close attentiveness to being known as the Yarkovsky effect, which determines how an asteroid's path changes as it absorbs and emits energy from the sun. OSIRIS-REx will attempt to measure this affect for the first time, perhaps allowing NASA to predict the trajectories of potentially hazardous asteroids -- including the RQ36. The 1,900-foot wide rock is anticipated to convergence Earth by the year 2182 and, gospel to recent estimates, there's a one in a burning question chance that it could in fact strike our planet. Now if you excuse us, we have to go prepare a bunker for our great-great-grandchildren. Head past the break for a video and full press release.

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NASA asteroid mission could explain how life began (and how ours might end) by origin appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 May 2011 10:27:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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