Can the National Aeronautics and Space Administration shift the orbit of an asteroid by smashing into it with a fast-moving spacecraft? The agency might find out Monday, when a bus-size craft traveling at a speed in excess of 14,000 miles an hour tries to hit a 525-foot-wide space rock.

The anticipated collision between the uncrewed spacecraft and the asteroid, named Dimorphos, marks the climactic moment of NASA’s $325 million Double Asteroid Redirection Test mission. DART is the world’s first mission to test a technology that one day might protect Earth from a catastrophic asteroid impact.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Polar bears and narwhals are ‘at risk of being wiped out’

Polar bears and narwhals in the Arctic are at risk of death…

Warning over ‘highly sophisticated’ hackers that take over your PC by secretly attacking WiFi router – how to stay safe

HIGHLY sophisticated hackers have found a way to take control of people’s…

Space Photos of the Week: There’s Nothing Like the Sun

A new telescope in Hawaii called the Daniel K. Inouye telescope has…

3 Black Photographers on Capturing the George Floyd Protests

Protesters surround Star Wars actor John Boyega at a rally on racial…