Article 6D87N After bopping an asteroid 3 years ago, NASA will finally see the results

After bopping an asteroid 3 years ago, NASA will finally see the results

by
Eric Berger
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6D87N)
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Enlarge / A look inside the clean room where OSIRIS-REx's samples will be stored. (credit: NASA)

Christmas Day for scientists who study asteroids is coming in just two months when a small spacecraft carrying material from a distant rubble pile will land in a Utah desert.

The return of the OSIRIS-REx sample container on September 24 will cap the primary mission to capture material from an asteroid-in this case, the carbonaceous near-Earth asteroid Bennu-and return some of its pebbles and dust to Earth.

It has been a long time coming. This mission launched seven years ago and has been in the planning and development phase for over a decade. To say the scientists who have fought for and executed this mission are anxious and excited is an understatement. But there is an additional frisson with OSIRIS-REx, as scientists are not entirely sure what they've been able to pull away from the asteroid.

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