A Web Around Asteroid Bennu – Transcript
[Music]
This is Bennu…
One of Earth’s closest
planetary neighbors…
An asteroid roughly the
height of a skyscraper…
A remnant from the dawn
of the solar system, made of carbon-rich rocks and boulders…
And since late 2018, the
place that NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission has called home.
When OSIRIS-REx arrived,
it began wrapping Bennu in a complex web of observations – starting with a
Preliminary Survey of its size, shape, mass, and spin.
On New Year’s Eve, OSIRIS-REx
was captured into orbit by Bennu’s miniscule gravity, making it the smallest
world ever to be orbited by a spacecraft.
In early 2019, it broke
orbit to conduct a Detailed Survey.
A series of sweeping
passes allowed OSIRIS-REx to study geological features at different latitudes
and times of day, enabling stereo imaging and landmark-based navigation.
During the Detailed
Survey, OSIRIS-REx globally mapped Bennu at only 5cm per pixel – the
highest-resolution of any planetary body…including Earth.
On June 12, the
spacecraft entered a new orbit at an altitude of just 680 meters – setting
another record, and establishing a home orbit for the remainder of the mission.
In September, it began
Reconnaissance on four candidate sample collection sites: potential locations
on Bennu to touch down and collect a sample later in the mission.
OSIRIS-REx concluded its
first year at Bennu back in orbit, circling the asteroid’s terminator, or
boundary between day and night.
Here, outside forces
acting on the spacecraft are balanced, allowing it to orbit within the same
plane over time.
Reconnaissance resumed
in early 2020, with close flyovers of the primary sample collection site
Nightingale, and the backup site Osprey.
In mid-April, OSIRIS-REx
performed the first of two rehearsals prior to sample collection.
It navigated to a
predetermined “Checkpoint” about 125 meters above Bennu, then descended to
within 65 meters before backing away.
After the Checkpoint
rehearsal, OSIRIS-REx flew one final Reconnaissance sortie over site Osprey.
Then, it made a series
of high-altitude maneuvers while rebooting its onboard processor, and preparing
for its second rehearsal of the sample collection event.
On August 11, OSIRIS-REx
departed its home orbit and made a four-hour traverse to Bennu’s northern
hemisphere, retracing its earlier path.
After performing the
Checkpoint engine burn to begin its descent, it made a second engine burn
called “Matchpoint” to match Bennu’s rotation, before backing away at an
altitude of approximately 40 meters.
Now, the most crucial
moment of the mission had arrived.
On October 20, 2020, at
approximately 11:30 am Mountain Time, the spacecraft departed orbit.
A few hours before,
mission controllers on Earth had sent the commands for the Touch-And-Go sample
collection maneuver, or TAG.
As they watched with
anticipation, OSIRIS-REx steered itself to sample site Nightingale, maneuvering
toward the small crater at the walking pace of a spider.
At 4:11 pm, the mission
received confirmation: OSIRIS-REx had touched down and collected its sample.
Following TAG, the
spacecraft drifted to a safe distance away from Bennu.
By the end of October,
mission controllers determined that it had exceeded its goal of collecting 60
grams of asteroid material.
They directed it to stow
the sample in preparation for return to Earth.
Before departing Bennu,
OSIRIS-REx was given one final task.
On April 7, it flew over
site Nightingale to observe how the sample collection event had changed the
surface.
And with that,
OSIRIS-REx had recorded its mark on Bennu and spun the last strand of its web.
In September 2023, the
spacecraft will fly past Earth and send its sample home.
[Music fades]