In 2022, NASA tested humanity’s ability to knock an asteroid off-course as part of the DART mission. And it didn’t go quite as expected.
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00:00There are over 30,000 space rocks hurtling through near-Earth space, according to the European Space Agency.
00:10And if we don't want to go the way of the dinos someday, we may have to take matters into our own hands.
00:16That was the general idea behind NASA's DART mission, which, after years of careful planning,
00:22tested humanity's ability to deflect an asteroid with a spacecraft in September of 2022.
00:28As Science Alert reports, the data is in and the results appear better than expected.
00:36According to research from Northern Arizona University, asteroid Dimorphis, target of the DART mission,
00:42was shifted from its 12-hour orbit of larger asteroid Didymus by a total of 33 minutes,
00:49a much larger change than NASA's projected seven-minute alteration to its orbit.
00:54Studying material ejected from the asteroid after impact,
00:58the Planetary Science Institute found that Dimorphis ejected twin tails of dust like a dry comet.
01:04A study by SETI found that the asteroid lost 0.3 to 0.5 percent of its total mass,
01:12based on the brightness of the light reflecting off its surface,
01:15with the ejected debris accounting for most of the change in its orbit transferring even more momentum than the collision itself,
01:22per John Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
01:26The findings, which suggest the means to deflect asteroids are within humanity's grasp,
01:31were published across a series of five papers in the journal Nature.
01:35Thankfully, no known asteroids will endanger our planet for another 100 years.
01:40Hopefully by then, with enough reconnaissance, we'll be ready.
01:47So, that is clear.
01:56See you next week.