Japanese
asteroid probe sets off on six-year journey
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[December 03, 2014]
By Elaine Lies
TOKYO (Reuters) - A Japanese space probe
named after a falcon blasted off on Wednesday, setting off on a six-year
round trip to an asteroid for samples that scientists hope will help
reveal the origins of life.
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The launch of the Hayabusa 2, postponed twice because of bad
weather, comes less than a month after a European Space Agency probe
landed on a comet in a pioneering mission.
Hayabusa means peregrine falcon in Japanese.
The probe will map the surface of the asteroid before touching down,
deploying small explosives to blast a crater and then collect
resulting debris.
Asteroids are believed to have formed at the dawn of the solar
system and the probe's target is one called 1999 JU3, which
scientists believe contains organic matter that may have contributed
to life on Earth.
The probe is expected to arrive at the asteroid in mid-2018 and
return with samples in 2020, the year that Tokyo hosts the Summer
Olympic Games.
The mission should help Japan's space program put a troubled past
well behind it.
The first Hayabusa probe was unable to collect as much material as
hoped but still made history by being the first vessel to bring back
samples from an asteroid. Its seven-year mission ended in 2010 when
it blazed a trail over Australian before slamming into the desert.
Both probes were developed by the Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency.
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The first Hayabusa probe was launched on the domestically developed
H-2A rocket, as was Hayabusa 2. In 2003, an H-2A rocket carrying two
spy satellites veered off course and had to be destroyed.
The Hayabusa 2 launch was first scheduled for Nov. 30 but delayed
twice by bad weather. The last chance for a successful launch before
2016 would have been Dec 7.
The European Space Agency's Philae probe finished a 57-hour mission
on the surface of a comet on Nov. 15, but lost battery power due to
landing in a spot shielded from the sun it needed to charge the
battery for an extended mission.
(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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