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Hera mission will arrive at asteroid impact site in November


Hera mission: Yellow boxy spacecraft passing in front of deep, shadowed crater on irregular gray space rock.
In this artist’s concept, the Hera mission scans the impact crater that DART left behind. Image via ESA.

Hera is ready for its asteroid rendezvous

In 2022, the groundbreaking DART mission struck and moved an asteroid. It was a test of Earth’s ability to defend itself from an incoming asteroid threat. On October 7, 2024, a follow-up mission – ESA’s Hera – launched toward the asteroid impact site on Dimorphos, a little moon of the asteroid Didymos. Now, Hera is now just a few months away from its November 2026 meeting with the asteroid pair. It will spend six months investigating the aftereffects from the impact.

So far in 2026, the Hera mission has undergone a deep-space maneuver to correct its course toward its target. And as of July 2026, it has just finished receiving an upgrade to its software. Hera is now about 8 light-minutes from Earth on its journey to the near-Earth asteroid.

When Hera reaches the asteroids, it will release two cubesats, Milani and Junventas. Milani is in charge of spectral surface observations (splitting light bounced off the asteroid into a rainbow array of colors, then analyzing that light). And Juventas will take the first radar soundings in the heart of an asteroid.

When DART hit Didymos

Back in 2022, when DART hit Didymos’s little moon Dimorphos, it made a big splash. We know for sure it pushed the asteroid slightly out of its previous orbit. And the debris kicked up in the collision might even have created a new meteor shower for Earth!

Hera is going to learn more about just what happened when DART struck the little asteroid, creating a crater on its surface and moving it slightly in orbit. It’s going to learn more about Dimorphos itself, to help refine our knowledge of what DART did … to keep us safe from future asteroid collisions.

This will be the first investigation of a binary asteroid. Hera’s focus will be on Dimorphos, the moonlet that DART impacted. According to ESA – the mission planner – Hera will conduct a “crime scene investigation” at the little asteroid moon. But Hera will also check out both Didymos and the dusty environs unleashed by the impact.

Here are 3 mysteries that Hera will help solve

ESA shared 3 mysteries that Hera will help solve:

  1. Hera will measure the density and composition of Dimorphos in detail and help scientists determine whether it is a ‘rubble pile’ loosely held together by gravity, or a solid core covered in boulders and gravel.
  2. Hera will map the crater created by DART’s impact down to 10-cm resolution to help scientists better understand how the surface material responded to the collision. It’s possible that there is no crater at all, rather the impact reshaped the entire asteroid!
  3. About 15% of known asteroids are actually binary systems, but their origins remain mysterious. Hera will determine whether Dimorphos and Didymos are made from the same material, which would hint that the rapidly spinning Didymos once threw off debris into space that later formed Dimorphos.

Hera project scientist Michael Küppers

Watch EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd speak with Hera project scientist Michael Küppers below. Get the latest here about keeping Earth safe from asteroids.

The Hera mission and a missing planet

Watch a video about the Hera mission to the asteroids Didymos and Dimorphos.

The Hera mission vs the Colosseum

The asteroid Didymos is about a half mile (780 meters) wide. So, that’s about the size of the Golden Gate Bridge. Its little companion, Dimorphos, is about 560 feet (170 meters) in diameter. And that’s about the size of the Great Pyramid. Or compare it to Italy’s Colosseum below.

Huge, irregular rock hovering over Roman Colosseum, a large, ruined stone stadium.
This graphic compares the size of the asteroid moonlet Dimorphos to the Colosseum in Rome, Italy. Image via ESA.

Bottom line: The Hera mission is on its way to the asteroids Didymos and Dimorphos. The DART mission struck Dimorphos as a planetary defense test in 2022. Hera should reach the asteroids in November 2026.

Via ESA

The post Hera mission will arrive at asteroid impact site in November first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/an1HLpd
Hera mission: Yellow boxy spacecraft passing in front of deep, shadowed crater on irregular gray space rock.
In this artist’s concept, the Hera mission scans the impact crater that DART left behind. Image via ESA.

Hera is ready for its asteroid rendezvous

In 2022, the groundbreaking DART mission struck and moved an asteroid. It was a test of Earth’s ability to defend itself from an incoming asteroid threat. On October 7, 2024, a follow-up mission – ESA’s Hera – launched toward the asteroid impact site on Dimorphos, a little moon of the asteroid Didymos. Now, Hera is now just a few months away from its November 2026 meeting with the asteroid pair. It will spend six months investigating the aftereffects from the impact.

So far in 2026, the Hera mission has undergone a deep-space maneuver to correct its course toward its target. And as of July 2026, it has just finished receiving an upgrade to its software. Hera is now about 8 light-minutes from Earth on its journey to the near-Earth asteroid.

When Hera reaches the asteroids, it will release two cubesats, Milani and Junventas. Milani is in charge of spectral surface observations (splitting light bounced off the asteroid into a rainbow array of colors, then analyzing that light). And Juventas will take the first radar soundings in the heart of an asteroid.

When DART hit Didymos

Back in 2022, when DART hit Didymos’s little moon Dimorphos, it made a big splash. We know for sure it pushed the asteroid slightly out of its previous orbit. And the debris kicked up in the collision might even have created a new meteor shower for Earth!

Hera is going to learn more about just what happened when DART struck the little asteroid, creating a crater on its surface and moving it slightly in orbit. It’s going to learn more about Dimorphos itself, to help refine our knowledge of what DART did … to keep us safe from future asteroid collisions.

This will be the first investigation of a binary asteroid. Hera’s focus will be on Dimorphos, the moonlet that DART impacted. According to ESA – the mission planner – Hera will conduct a “crime scene investigation” at the little asteroid moon. But Hera will also check out both Didymos and the dusty environs unleashed by the impact.

Here are 3 mysteries that Hera will help solve

ESA shared 3 mysteries that Hera will help solve:

  1. Hera will measure the density and composition of Dimorphos in detail and help scientists determine whether it is a ‘rubble pile’ loosely held together by gravity, or a solid core covered in boulders and gravel.
  2. Hera will map the crater created by DART’s impact down to 10-cm resolution to help scientists better understand how the surface material responded to the collision. It’s possible that there is no crater at all, rather the impact reshaped the entire asteroid!
  3. About 15% of known asteroids are actually binary systems, but their origins remain mysterious. Hera will determine whether Dimorphos and Didymos are made from the same material, which would hint that the rapidly spinning Didymos once threw off debris into space that later formed Dimorphos.

Hera project scientist Michael Küppers

Watch EarthSky’s Deborah Byrd speak with Hera project scientist Michael Küppers below. Get the latest here about keeping Earth safe from asteroids.

The Hera mission and a missing planet

Watch a video about the Hera mission to the asteroids Didymos and Dimorphos.

The Hera mission vs the Colosseum

The asteroid Didymos is about a half mile (780 meters) wide. So, that’s about the size of the Golden Gate Bridge. Its little companion, Dimorphos, is about 560 feet (170 meters) in diameter. And that’s about the size of the Great Pyramid. Or compare it to Italy’s Colosseum below.

Huge, irregular rock hovering over Roman Colosseum, a large, ruined stone stadium.
This graphic compares the size of the asteroid moonlet Dimorphos to the Colosseum in Rome, Italy. Image via ESA.

Bottom line: The Hera mission is on its way to the asteroids Didymos and Dimorphos. The DART mission struck Dimorphos as a planetary defense test in 2022. Hera should reach the asteroids in November 2026.

Via ESA

The post Hera mission will arrive at asteroid impact site in November first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/an1HLpd

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