Epic Voyage: NASA's Psyche Mission to Unlock Ancient Metallic Secrets
NASA's Psyche probe embarks on an ambitious 2.2 billion-mile journey to study the metallic asteroid Psyche, providing insights into Earth's formation. The mission includes a gravity assist flyby of Mars and aims to unlock the asteroid's mysteries, hypothesized to be a protoplanet's core, by 2029.
NASA's Psyche probe has set a course for a close Mars encounter on Friday, aiming to harness the planet's gravity to propel the spacecraft towards its destination: the largest known metallic asteroid in our solar system. Launched in October 2023, the mission spans an incredible 2.2 billion miles.
The probe will pass within 2,800 miles of Mars, reaching speeds of 12,333 mph as it utilizes the Red Planet's gravitational forces to adjust course. This maneuver helps conserve xenon gas propellant in its solar-electric ion thruster system, which is being tested on an interplanetary mission for the first time.
The spacecraft, about the size of a small van, is expected to reach the asteroid, also named Psyche, by August 2029. Over 26 months, it will map the asteroid's features, investigating its metal-rich composition to offer clues about planet formation. This celestial body could resemble a planet’s core without ever being mined, according to NASA.
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