杏吧原创

Third lander arrives on asteroid Ryugu with only 16 hours to live

Japan has just dropped off its third lander on the surface of the asteroid Ryugu. It has less than a day to complete its mission before its batteries run out
The Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout seen from Hayabusa 2
A shot the MASCOT lander took during its descent from Hayabusa 2. Its shadow can be seen in the top right of the image.
Mascot Lander

It鈥檚 a lander bonanza on the asteroid Ryugu. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency鈥檚 (JAXA) Hayabusa 2 spacecraft has just dropped off its third lander on the surface of the asteroid.

The Mobile Asteroid Surface Scout (MASCOT) lander is the largest of four that Hayabusa 2 will be deploying on Ryugu over the course of its mission. It is a box about 30 centimetres across and 20 centimetres tall, weighing just under 10 kilograms. It doesn鈥檛 move around using wheels, like most rovers, but using a tungsten arm that swings around to make the lander tumble and hop across the ground.

MASCOT is fitted with a camera, a radiometer to measure the temperature of the surface and surrounding dust, a spectrometer to investigate what the dust is made of, and a magnetometer to determine Ryugu鈥檚 magnetic field.

鈥淗ayabusa 2 will take samples, but it will destroy the surface when it takes the samples,鈥 says Ralf Jaumann at the German Aerospace Center, MASCOT鈥檚 principal investigator. 鈥淢ASCOT will give us the context of the samples from the surface, the ground truth.鈥

Unlike the mission鈥檚 other landers, which are powered by solar panels, MASCOT only has a 16-hour, non-rechargeable battery, so it will be a mad rush to tumble around and take measurements from three different spots on the surface.

鈥淚t is a stressful day, not only for us but for MASCOT itself,鈥 says Jaumann. 鈥淢ASCOT has to do everything itself, we cannot really control it 鈥 we just have to hope we鈥檝e really thought of all the possibilities that could happen and programmed them into the computer.鈥

Researchers hope that the measurements from this lander will help figure out exactly what Ryugu is made of, which could help confirm how it was formed. Because asteroids like this one are relics of the early solar system, this could also help us understand the history of the planets.

Topics: Asteroids / Space