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NASA's DART mission: What to know about the impact

NASA will use its DART spacecraft to impact the faraway asteroid Dimorphos on Monday. The moonlet is nearly 7 million miles away from Earth and orbits Didymos.

There are just two days until the NASA Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) deliberately crashes into a faraway asteroid. 

The Monday mission is humanity's first attempt to change the motion of an asteroid in space by intentionally crashing a spacecraft into it. 

The agency says the target asteroid, Dimorphos, is not a threat to Earth and the "perfect testing ground" to see if the asteroid deflection method would be a viable way to protect the planet should an asteroid on a collision course with Earth be discovered.

The small moonlet orbits a larger asteroid called Didymos, lapping it around every 11 hours and 55 minutes.

JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE CAPTURES STUNNING IMAGE OF NEPTUNE, RINGS

The kinetic impact into Dimorphos, which is nearly 7 million miles away from Earth, should shave about 10 minutes off that. 

The DART spacecraft will slam into the 2,500-foot asteroid at 14,000 miles per hour and cameras and telescopes will watch the crash – though it will take days or weeks to figure out if it actually changed the orbit.

The $325 million-dollar planetary defense test began when DART launched last fall.

DART has a single instrument, the DRACO (Didymos Reconnaissance and Asteroid Camera for Optical) navigation imager.

DRACO supports the spacecraft's autonomous guidance system, or SMART (Small-body Maneuvering Autonomous Real-Time Navigation) Nav, to guide it to impact.

The imager has snapped thousands of pictures of stars, giving the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) team leading the mission for NASA's Planetary Defense Coordination Office the necessary data to support ongoing testing and rehearsals.

NASA SPACECRAFT TO SMASH INTO ASTEROID TO TEST PLANETARY DEFENSE

In addition, the DART spacecraft's "mini-photographer" LICIACube and its two optical cameras successfully deployed on Sept. 11.

At the beginning of the month, the 1,260-pound spacecraft got its first look at Didymos.

An hour before impact, Dimorphos, at 11 billion pounds, will emerge as a point of light, becoming larger and larger in images.

Managers are confident DART won’t smash into the larger Didymos by mistake because the spacecraft’s navigation is designed to distinguish between the two asteroids and target the smaller one.

Unless DART misses – there is a less than 10% chance – it will be the end of the road for the spacecraft. 

If it does, it will encounter the asteroids again in a couple of years for a second shot.

NASA says there is no chance that either asteroid will threaten Earth now or in the future and no known asteroid poses a threat.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Photography by Christophe Tomatis
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