Japan's Hayabusa2 probe to conduct flyby of Torifune asteroid

173 points
1/21/1970
7 days ago
by dvh

Comments


pmontra

The real title of the article is very different:

"Japan's Hayabusa2 probe completes flyby of Torifune asteroid"

The flyby already happened last Sunday.

4 days ago

onlypassingthru

I'll never work in Mission Control, but the Hayabusa2 website lets me pretend I do. Kudos to whomever designed this website:

https://haya2now.jp/en.html

7 days ago

_joel

4 days ago

jayzer01

Interesting. Do you think people could really use openmct for a fun display or is it quite a heavy project to try to work with for that.

4 days ago

dothack

I know it's used for some racing sim stuff: https://github.com/nasa/openmct/discussions/6392

4 days ago

jayzer01

I see, thanks. Maybe it could be cool to make a light branch for personal sim projects.

4 days ago

nirav72

I wonder if someone has hooked this up to Kerbal Space Program.

4 days ago

ApolloRising

check the plugins page, it is there in experimental condition

3 days ago

nirav72

Thanks. Based on your suggestion - I found this on the plugins page. in case someone else is interested:

https://github.com/hudsonfoo/kerbal-openmct

3 days ago

alexpotato

If people love to watch novel use cases of dashboard software like Grafana etc, I highly recommend this video about it being used at a water treatment plant: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wucMZ9tb1I0

4 days ago

tjpnz

Seems it was successful and they captured an image:

https://japannews.yomiuri.co.jp/science-nature/science/20260...

4 days ago

slicktux

My favorite space probe is the European Space Agency Philae. It probes the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko and actually landed on it. It was able to send back images of its surface. Amazing!

4 days ago

Sharlin

It was certainly cute, but let's not forget that it was always just a "nice extra" to the main Rosetta mission. But it did teach us that landing on (and grabbing onto) a comet surface can be tricky and fail even if you're equipped with several contingency mechanisms.

BTW, ESA is unfortunately not nearly as famous for its public outreach work as NASA, but the Rosetta/Philae PR team was on fire, releasing an incredibly charming series of cartoon animations documenting the mission:

https://www.esa.int/ESA_Multimedia/Videos/2016/12/The_amazin...

Be sure to watch until the very end for a very tear-jerking scene :')

And while you're at it, watch the related live-action short science fiction film "Ambition", starring Aidan Gillen: https://youtu.be/H08tGjXNHO4?si=wtEWdv6OmX5y7-eg

4 days ago

slicktux

Thank you! I will definitely check it out!

4 days ago

GildenEye

It's such a pity about Philae. With just a little more luck, we could have gathered much more information about the comet, even though its achievements are already truly memorable. I wonder when we'll finally be able to land on a comet again.

4 days ago

MomsAVoxell

My favourite space probe is Psyche .. I hope I live to see the day that the asteroid named Psyche 16 is harvested for its immense wealth. It would amazing to see rocket motors 3D printed up there ..

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16_Psyche

3 days ago

numpad0

Both Hayabusa 1 and 2 did sample returns, this flyby is an afterlife extra.

4 days ago

whycome

Why is this comet comment downvoted. Thats super interesting.

https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/comets/67p-churyumov-g...

4 days ago

aaron695

[dead]

4 days ago

pavel_lishin

> During the flyby, Hayabusa2 was expected to approach as close as 800 meters from the center of Torifune and to capture images of the asteroid while traveling at a relative speed of 5 kilometers per second.

Imagine the sort of work required to get clear photos of that. It would be hard to show up at work the next day if all you have is a blurry streak like you're taking photos on a rollercoaster with a disposable camera in 1993.

4 days ago

dylan604

Couldn't you just use the algos to put that blurry streak back together. It's a known speed and straight trajectory and not even as complicated like the bouncing roller coaster image. Similar-ish to rolling shutter correction???

4 days ago

pavel_lishin

Maybe? But I would think there's a limit to how much you can do with an "overexposed" image, right?

4 days ago

fleroviumna

[dead]

4 days ago