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Asteroid forms a debris cloud after intentional hit from spacecraft

<i>ESO/M. Kornmesser</i><br/>An artist's illustration depicts how the debris cloud likely looked as it was blasted off of the asteroid.
ESO/M. Kornmesser
ESO/M. Kornmesser
An artist's illustration depicts how the debris cloud likely looked as it was blasted off of the asteroid.

By Ashley Strickland, CNN

Telescopes around the world were watching when a NASA spacecraft intentionally crashed into an asteroid in September 2022.

New images released Tuesday by astronomers who used the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope in Chile reveal detailed views of debris streaming away from the collision created by the Double Asteroid Redirect Test.

The DART spacecraft, weighing about 1,200 pounds (544 kilograms), slammed head-on into the asteroid Dimorphos at 13,000 miles per hour (20,921 kilometers per hour) in an attempt to change the space rock’s velocity.

It was the first time humanity has set out to change the movement of a celestial object, and the results showed how this kinetic impact technology could be used to deflect asteroids that may appear to be on a collision course with Earth. Neither Dimorphos, nor the larger asteroid it orbits named Didymos, pose a threat to Earth.

The DART impact was successful, changing Dimorphos’ orbital period around Didymos by 33 minutes. This first test of planetary defense, which took place 7 million miles (11.3 million kilometers) from Earth, also released tons of material into space.

Two different teams of astronomers used the Very Large Telescope to study the aftermath of the event.

“Impacts between asteroids happen naturally, but you never know it in advance,” said lead study author Cyrielle Opitom, an astronomer and chancellor’s fellow at the University of Edinburgh, in a statement. “DART is a really great opportunity to study a controlled impact, almost as in a laboratory.”

Opitom and her fellow researchers tracked the debris cloud that resulted from the collision for a month using the telescope’s Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer instrument, also called MUSE.

The cloud of rocks and debris initially blasted off of Dimorphos’ surface first appeared to be made of fine particles. Days later, the team spied other structures in the debris cloud, like clumps and spirals of larger particles, as well as a long cometlike tail streaming behind the asteroid.

The MUSE instrument allowed the researchers to look at the cloud through a rainbow of light to look for telltale signatures of chemicals and gases. But the team couldn’t detect any water or oxygen.

“Asteroids are not expected to contain significant amounts of ice, so detecting any trace of water would have been a real surprise,” Opitom said.

The team also kept an eye out for any trace of the DART spacecraft itself, including the propellant it used to journey to the asteroid.

“We knew it was a long shot, as the amount of gas that would be left in the tanks from the propulsion system would not be huge. Furthermore, some of it would have travelled too far to detect it with MUSE by the time we started observing,” she said.

Other recent research included a “movie” captured by the Hubble Space Telescope showing the evolution of the asteroid’s new tail and just how many tons of material were sprayed into space at impact.

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