WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:02.870 What do you think would be the craziest shape you could imagine 2 00:00:02.870 --> 00:00:04.538 the asteroid being? 3 00:00:04.538 --> 00:00:09.877 [logo music] 4 00:00:09.877 --> 00:00:13.046 Hello space fans, I’m Katrina Jackson with the Office of 5 00:00:13.046 --> 00:00:16.316 Communications at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. Two years 6 00:00:16.316 --> 00:00:19.453 ago, in September 2016, OSIRIS-REx launched... 7 00:00:19.453 --> 00:00:20.587 [rocket engine burn] >>ANNOUNCER’S VOICE: 8 00:00:20.587 --> 00:00:24.291 And liftoff of OSIRIS-REx! [cheering] Oh my gosh! Woo! 9 00:00:24.291 --> 00:00:26.660 ...NASA’s first mission to go collect a sample from an 10 00:00:26.660 --> 00:00:30.898 asteroid and return it to Earth. Now it’s August of 2018, and 11 00:00:30.898 --> 00:00:33.934 OSIRIS-REx is finally approaching its target, asteroid 12 00:00:33.934 --> 00:00:37.237 Bennu. So I found a couple people who can explain what the 13 00:00:37.237 --> 00:00:40.574 spacecraft is doing during this approach phase and why it’s so 14 00:00:40.574 --> 00:00:43.377 exciting to get to this point in the mission. [music starts] 15 00:00:43.377 --> 00:00:47.080 What is the approach phase of the OSIRIS-REx mission? The 16 00:00:47.080 --> 00:00:52.886 approach phase is when we reach about two million kilometers 17 00:00:52.886 --> 00:00:56.957 from the asteroid Bennu. You know we’ve been approaching 18 00:00:56.957 --> 00:00:59.726 Bennu ever since we launched, but once we reach this period 19 00:00:59.726 --> 00:01:03.196 where we’re about two million kilomters away, that’s when our 20 00:01:03.196 --> 00:01:06.900 cameras can start to pick up Bennu and see it as a single 21 00:01:06.900 --> 00:01:10.604 pixel in the image. So what will you be doing throughout this 22 00:01:10.604 --> 00:01:12.940 approach phase? Sure, so I’m part of the flight dynamics 23 00:01:12.940 --> 00:01:15.342 team, and that basically means that I work with a team of 24 00:01:15.342 --> 00:01:18.278 highly skilled engineers, from Kinetix Aerospace and Goddard 25 00:01:18.278 --> 00:01:21.014 Space Flight Center, and we’re responsible for navigating the 26 00:01:21.014 --> 00:01:24.351 spacecraft. During the approach phase, so we’ll take those 27 00:01:24.351 --> 00:01:27.487 images, we’ll process them, we’ll figure out very precisely 28 00:01:27.487 --> 00:01:31.391 where Bennu is in the image, and we’ll take that data and feed it 29 00:01:31.391 --> 00:01:35.062 into our software, along with some tracking data from the DSN, 30 00:01:35.062 --> 00:01:37.831 range and doppler measurements, and we’ll figure out our best 31 00:01:37.831 --> 00:01:41.101 estimate of where the spacecraft is relative to the asteroid and 32 00:01:41.101 --> 00:01:43.203 also where the asteroid is relative to the rest of the 33 00:01:43.203 --> 00:01:46.707 solar system. And during this phase, will you be looking out 34 00:01:46.707 --> 00:01:49.543 for any sort of hazards around the asteroid, like little moons 35 00:01:49.543 --> 00:01:52.713 or dust? Yeah absolutely. We have specific science 36 00:01:52.713 --> 00:01:55.215 observation campaigns where they’ll be looking for small 37 00:01:55.215 --> 00:01:58.385 satellite possibilities or activity on the asteroid. We 38 00:01:58.385 --> 00:02:01.321 don’t expect any of that but we’ll have to look out for it 39 00:02:01.321 --> 00:02:05.058 just in case. So Lori, I know your background is planetary 40 00:02:05.058 --> 00:02:08.628 science. As a planetary scientist, how excited are you 41 00:02:08.628 --> 00:02:11.832 about the OSIRIS-REx mission and about bringing a sample of an 42 00:02:11.832 --> 00:02:15.335 asteroid back for the first time for NASA? This is incredibly 43 00:02:15.335 --> 00:02:18.338 exciting. The asteroids are the building blocks of the solar 44 00:02:18.338 --> 00:02:21.742 system, that’s what built and made up our planets. They 45 00:02:21.742 --> 00:02:25.545 possibly carry the building blocks, the molecules that could 46 00:02:25.545 --> 00:02:29.383 lead to life. But even more than that, most of our missions we 47 00:02:29.383 --> 00:02:33.253 send a satellite to go orbit a planet or maybe a lander to go 48 00:02:33.253 --> 00:02:36.623 land on the surface. But they stay there and do their science 49 00:02:36.623 --> 00:02:40.727 at that location. OSIRIS-REx is going to grab a sample and bring 50 00:02:40.727 --> 00:02:44.831 it back to Earth. And that is really special and unique. We 51 00:02:44.831 --> 00:02:49.403 can not only analyze that sample today, but then we can save that 52 00:02:49.403 --> 00:02:52.272 sample and as our knowledge grows in the future and as our 53 00:02:52.272 --> 00:02:55.809 laboratory capabilities grow in the future, we can go back and 54 00:02:55.809 --> 00:02:58.812 reanalyze that sample. It will be there for us to keep learning 55 00:02:58.812 --> 00:03:02.883 from. So OSIRIS-REx launched two years ago in 2016. It’s finally 56 00:03:02.883 --> 00:03:05.819 starting the approach phase. How excited are you to get to this 57 00:03:05.819 --> 00:03:08.655 point in the mission? Oh very exciting. Like you said it’s, 58 00:03:08.655 --> 00:03:11.858 we’ve been preparing for years for this even before launch. And 59 00:03:11.858 --> 00:03:14.761 kind of planning and testing and working out what we’re going to 60 00:03:14.761 --> 00:03:17.964 do when we get to the asteroid, and kind of making assumptions 61 00:03:17.964 --> 00:03:20.967 of what the asteroid will look like and how it will be. And we 62 00:03:20.967 --> 00:03:23.003 have some pretty good ground-based estimates, but you 63 00:03:23.003 --> 00:03:25.338 know we won’t know until we actually get there. And this is 64 00:03:25.338 --> 00:03:28.241 the first time we get to see it and it’s sort of starting the 65 00:03:28.241 --> 00:03:31.244 proximity operations phase where we’ll be working in the vicinity 66 00:03:31.244 --> 00:03:34.214 of the asteroid for two years or more. What do you think would be 67 00:03:34.214 --> 00:03:37.818 the craziest shape you could imagine the asteroid being? So 68 00:03:37.818 --> 00:03:41.488 right now it’s fairly a benign shape, it’s kind of bulged in 69 00:03:41.488 --> 00:03:45.459 the center. But if you look at pictures of 67P 70 00:03:45.459 --> 00:03:47.961 Churyumov-Gerasimenko, the comet, where it’s kind of a 71 00:03:47.961 --> 00:03:50.430 rubber duck, I don’t think it’s going to be that extreme, but 72 00:03:50.430 --> 00:03:53.266 you never know. I think probably the worst case it will be really 73 00:03:53.266 --> 00:03:56.636 maybe kind of stretched out more than we think more top shaped 74 00:03:56.636 --> 00:04:01.508 than spherical. Why would that be worst case? So, worst case 75 00:04:01.508 --> 00:04:04.711 for us, ‘cause obviously eventually we have to go down to 76 00:04:04.711 --> 00:04:08.281 the surface and touch it. So if it’s irregularly shaped, or if 77 00:04:08.281 --> 00:04:11.885 it’s kind of rotating or spinning a complex way, that we, 78 00:04:11.885 --> 00:04:14.921 it’s hard to characterize. You know, a nice spherical shape 79 00:04:14.921 --> 00:04:17.390 would be nice for designing trajectories down to the 80 00:04:17.390 --> 00:04:19.493 surface. And if it’s more irregular that would be a little 81 00:04:19.493 --> 00:04:21.561 more challenging. Yeah, it would be nice if the asteroid is 82 00:04:21.561 --> 00:04:24.164 simple and makes it easy for you guys. Yes, it would, but we 83 00:04:24.164 --> 00:04:26.633 can’t, you know as they say, you can’t put requirements on the 84 00:04:26.633 --> 00:04:30.337 asteroid. So we’ll have to kind of adapt our mission to whatever 85 00:04:30.337 --> 00:04:35.008 it gives us, and I think we’re ready. As Kenny said, the 86 00:04:35.008 --> 00:04:37.711 OSIRIS-REx team is definitely ready to start this exciting 87 00:04:37.711 --> 00:04:40.914 next phase of the mission. OSIRIS-REx will arrive at Bennu 88 00:04:40.914 --> 00:04:44.484 in December of this year, 2018, and then it will spend the next 89 00:04:44.484 --> 00:04:47.754 year and a half studying the asteroid. In July of 2020, 90 00:04:47.754 --> 00:04:50.824 OSIRIS-REx will collect a sample from the surface of Bennu, and 91 00:04:50.824 --> 00:04:54.928 then it will deliver that sample to Earth in 2023. So stay tuned 92 00:04:54.928 --> 00:04:57.364 over the next several months and years to learn about the 93 00:04:57.364 --> 00:05:00.433 spacecraft’s progress in helping us unveil the mysteries of our 94 00:05:00.433 --> 00:05:02.068 solar system’s formation. 95 00:05:02.068 --> 00:05:09.309 [music fades out] 96 00:05:09.309 --> 00:05:12.913 [OSIRIS- REx logo] 97 00:05:12.913 --> 00:05:16.183 [satellite swooshes by, beep beep, beep beep, beep beep] 98 00:05:16.183 --> 00:00:00.000 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center www.nasa.gov/goddard