1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:01,501 (music throughout) Like boot prints on the Moon, 2 00:00:01,501 --> 00:00:05,338 NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft left its mark on asteroid Bennu. 3 00:00:05,338 --> 00:00:08,174 Now, new images — taken during the spacecraft's 4 00:00:08,174 --> 00:00:14,114 final fly-over on April 7, 2021 — reveal the aftermath of the historic feat. 5 00:00:14,114 --> 00:00:18,451 The spacecraft flew within 3.7 km of the asteroid — 6 00:00:18,451 --> 00:00:24,324 the closest it has been since the Touch-and-Go, or TAG, sample collection event on October 20, 2020. 7 00:00:24,324 --> 00:00:29,462 During TAG, the spacecraft's sampling head sunk 48.8 centimeters 8 00:00:29,462 --> 00:00:34,667 into the asteroid's surface and simultaneously fired a pressurized charge of nitrogen gas, 9 00:00:34,667 --> 00:00:39,572 churning up surface material and driving it into the collection chamber. 10 00:00:39,572 --> 00:00:43,243 Four of the spacecraft's back-away thrusters launched rocks and dust 11 00:00:43,243 --> 00:00:48,314 during the maneuver as OSIRIS-REx pushed back off into space. 12 00:00:48,314 --> 00:00:53,186 Multiple sub-meter boulders were mobilized by the thrusters into a campfire, 13 00:00:53,186 --> 00:00:57,991 ring-like shape – similar to rings of boulders seen around small craters pocking the surface. 14 00:00:57,991 --> 00:01:02,562 The spacecraft will remain in Bennu's vicinity until departure on May 10, 15 00:01:02,562 --> 00:01:05,598 when the mission will begin its two-year return cruise back to Earth. 16 00:01:05,598 --> 00:01:08,868 Ultimately, it will deliver the collected sample to the 17 00:01:08,868 --> 00:01:12,839 Utah Test and Training Range on September 24, 2023.