Nasa announces 2 missions to study early solar system
The
mission will help Nasa scientists to learn how planets and other bodies
separated into layers like cores, mantles and crusts early in their
histories
The US space agency Nasa on Wednesday announced two unmanned missions
to asteroids designed to study one of the earliest eras in the history
of the solar system.
They have been baptized Lucy and Psyche, and the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) hopes to launch them in 2021
and 2023, respectively.The period Nasa wants to learn more about is an era less than 10 million years after the birth of the sun.
The Lucy mission — named for a famous, critical hominin fossil set found in Ethiopia in 1974 — will involve sending a robotic spacecraft to study Jupiter’s so-called Trojan asteroids. These are thought to be relics of a much earlier era in the history of the solar system.
“This is a unique opportunity,” said Harold Levison, principal investigator of the Lucy mission.
“Because the Trojans are remnants of the primordial material that formed the outer planets, they hold vital clues to deciphering the history of the solar system. Lucy, like the human fossil for which it is named, will revolutionize the understanding of our origins.”
Meanwhile the Psyche mission aims to explore a huge, one-of-a-kind metal asteroid, called 16 Psyche, that is about three times farther away from the sun than the Earth is.
Most asteroids are rocky or icy but this one is thought to be mostly of iron and nickel, like the Earth’s core.
Nasa said scientists are considering the possibility that Psyche could be an exposed core of an early planet as large as Mars but which shed its rocky outer layers due to violent collisions billions of years ago.
The mission will help scientists learn how planets and other bodies separated into layers like cores, mantles and crusts early in their histories.
“This is an opportunity to explore a new type of world - not one of rock or ice, but of metal,” said Psyche principal investigator Lindy Elkins-Tanton, of Arizona State University in Tempe.
“16 Psyche is the only known object of its kind in the solar system, and this is the only way humans will ever visit a core. We learn about inner space by visiting outer space,” Elkins-Tanton said.
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