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Japan to Launch Asteroid-chasing Spacecraft Tonight: Watch It Live

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Japan is poised to launch an ambitious asteroid-chasing spacecraft tonight (Dec. 2) on a mission to bring samples of a space rock to Earth, and you can watch the space action online.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency will launch the Hayabusa2 asteroid probe at 11:22 p.m. EST (0422 Dec. 3 GMT) from Tanegashima Space Center, with JAXA officials offering a live webcast of the liftoff.

You can watch the asteroid mission launch webcast live on Space.com, courtesy of JAXA, beginning at 10:25 p.m. EST (0322 GMT/12:25 p.m. JST). At Tanegashima, the local time will be 1:22 p.m. Japan Standard Time on Wednesday, Dec. 3, at launch time. [Japan's Hayabusa 2 Asteroid Mission in Pictures]




hayabusa2-asteroid-1999-ju3-mission.jpg


The Hayabusa2 mission will send a spacecraft, three rovers and a small lander to the asteroid 1999 JU3, a space rock that is thought to contain water and organic material. It should take Hayabusa 2 about four years to reach the asteroid, then two more years to return samples of the space rock to Earth in late 2020, according to a JAXA mission description.

JAXA's Hayabusa2 mission will examine asteroid 1999 JU3 using an orbiter, a French/German lander and a rover. The spacecraft will fire a small impactor at the asteroid to excavate subsurface materials and then scoop those up for a return to Earth.

Asteroids are believed to be the building blocks of the solar system, representing a time billions of years ago when the area was little more than rock and ice. Over time, small chunks of material coalesced into the planets and moons we see today.

Hayabusa2 is a successor mission to the first Hayabusa, which launched in May 2003 and arrived at asteroid Itokawa in September 2005. Despite several glitches, that first mission managed to picked up a few grains of asteroid material and return them to Earth in a sample-return capsule that landed in the Australian outback in June 2010. This material has since been distributed to scientists worldwide.

Major changes to the sampling mechanism have been made for Hayabusa2, including an improved seal, increasing the number of sample compartments from one to three, and a backup mechanism that can pick up samples if Hayabusa 2 makes a sudden stop.

As with the predecessor mission, Hayabusa 2 will use an ion engine to make the journey to and from the asteroid. This method of propulsion will use about a tenth of the power a similar chemical-propellant engine would require, JAXA said in a statement.

"While Hayabusa has recorded a number of [the] world's first achievements, Hayabusa2 is aimed at enhancing the reliability of asteroid exploration techniques," JAXA officials wrote in a mission description. "At the same time, Hayabusa2 will challenge to obtain new technologies such as creation of artificial craters, high-speed communications in deep space, and new observation instruments."

The mission was originally slated to depart Nov. 30, but was postponed after clouds with ice were projected to be in the launch area.

JAXA is also streaming live launch views via its website, YouTubeand Ustream.

Editor's Note: This story was updated at 11 am ET to correct the name of Hayabusa2, per JAXA.

Japan to Launch Asteroid-chasing Spacecraft Tonight: Watch It Live


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Mission is successful!

See the video here

A Japanese spacecraft has launched on an ambitious mission to blast a hole in an asteroid and return samples of the space rock back to Earth.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's (JAXA) Hayabusa2 asteroid mission blasted off Tuesday (Dec. 2) at 11:22 p.m. EST (0422 GMT Dec. 3) from the country's Tanegashima Space Center, where the local time at liftoff was 1:22 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 3. If all goes well, the spacecraft should return samples of the asteroid 1999 JU3 to Earth in late 2020, JAXA officials said.

Hayabusa2 is JAXA's bigger, bolder follow-up to its historic Hayabusa mission, which brought the first pristine samples of an asteroid to Earth in 2010 after its own seven-year mission. [Photos of Japan's Hayabusa2 Asteroid Mission]
 
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0612 GMT (1:12 a.m. EST)
The Hayabusa 2 spacecraft is now flying on its own on the first leg of a six-year round trip journey to asteroid 1999 JU3. It arrives there in June 2018.

Meanwhile, three secondary payloads are scheduled to separate from the H-2A rocket's upper stage in the next few minutes. They include a student-built amateur radio satellite, a "deep space sculpture" conceived in a marriage of art and space exploration, and a suitcase-sized probe designed to fly by another asteroid in 2016.

143250j77kd71rwlg8kwkw[1].jpg
 
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Japanese have been moving forward faster than everyone could expect.
China is still unable to catch up with them.
 
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Japan is poised to launch an ambitious asteroid-chasing spacecraft tonight (Dec. 2) on a mission to bring samples of a space rock to Earth, and you can watch the space action online.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency will launch the Hayabusa2 asteroid probe at 11:22 p.m. EST (0422 Dec. 3 GMT) from Tanegashima Space Center, with JAXA officials offering a live webcast of the liftoff.

You can watch the asteroid mission launch webcast live on Space.com, courtesy of JAXA, beginning at 10:25 p.m. EST (0322 GMT/12:25 p.m. JST). At Tanegashima, the local time will be 1:22 p.m. Japan Standard Time on Wednesday, Dec. 3, at launch time. [Japan's Hayabusa 2 Asteroid Mission in Pictures]




hayabusa2-asteroid-1999-ju3-mission.jpg


The Hayabusa2 mission will send a spacecraft, three rovers and a small lander to the asteroid 1999 JU3, a space rock that is thought to contain water and organic material. It should take Hayabusa 2 about four years to reach the asteroid, then two more years to return samples of the space rock to Earth in late 2020, according to a JAXA mission description.

JAXA's Hayabusa2 mission will examine asteroid 1999 JU3 using an orbiter, a French/German lander and a rover. The spacecraft will fire a small impactor at the asteroid to excavate subsurface materials and then scoop those up for a return to Earth.

Asteroids are believed to be the building blocks of the solar system, representing a time billions of years ago when the area was little more than rock and ice. Over time, small chunks of material coalesced into the planets and moons we see today.

Hayabusa2 is a successor mission to the first Hayabusa, which launched in May 2003 and arrived at asteroid Itokawa in September 2005. Despite several glitches, that first mission managed to picked up a few grains of asteroid material and return them to Earth in a sample-return capsule that landed in the Australian outback in June 2010. This material has since been distributed to scientists worldwide.

Major changes to the sampling mechanism have been made for Hayabusa2, including an improved seal, increasing the number of sample compartments from one to three, and a backup mechanism that can pick up samples if Hayabusa 2 makes a sudden stop.

As with the predecessor mission, Hayabusa 2 will use an ion engine to make the journey to and from the asteroid. This method of propulsion will use about a tenth of the power a similar chemical-propellant engine would require, JAXA said in a statement.

"While Hayabusa has recorded a number of [the] world's first achievements, Hayabusa2 is aimed at enhancing the reliability of asteroid exploration techniques," JAXA officials wrote in a mission description. "At the same time, Hayabusa2 will challenge to obtain new technologies such as creation of artificial craters, high-speed communications in deep space, and new observation instruments."

The mission was originally slated to depart Nov. 30, but was postponed after clouds with ice were projected to be in the launch area.

JAXA is also streaming live launch views via its website, YouTubeand Ustream.

Editor's Note: This story was updated at 11 am ET to correct the name of Hayabusa2, per JAXA.

Japan to Launch Asteroid-chasing Spacecraft Tonight: Watch It Live


View attachment 160133

Good kick to our Japanese friends
 
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This is not just for Japan, this is victory for all mankind !

Time for all of us: be we Japanese, Chinese, Russian, American, Indian et al, to work together. We are Mankind, We are the future...!

Very well said my firend Nihonji. It will indeed be great to one day see all major space faring nations on earth work together to explore sapce. since space is sooo large that no country or even all of us combined can ever really know/explore even 1/billionth of it. So its better we try our best to join forces to explore this entringuing space for all of mankind and learn as much as possible about it.
Im happy to see Japan getting more involve in innovative ways to explore space and do things others havent done before. Its getting boring(though valuable) to see countries doing the same thing others have done before. Japan's launch of this Asteriod chasing spacecraft(and even returning samples from deep space) will indeed be a major technological breakthrough from such a distance and will help us learn much about how our planet came into being. Its is indeed a new boost to such an endeavour. Hopefully other countries will also try and carry out more innovative space explorations like Nasa curiosity rover on Mars etc.

Congats again to Japan for this sucessful launch. Hope the ,mission will suceed. Good luck Japan. Banzai.:yahoo::cheers::-)

Japanese have been moving forward faster than everyone could expect.
China is still unable to catch up with them.

Bro we should restrain from turning this welcoming/valuable thread into another trolling/useless/futile competition excercise please. Why is it that some members here always like bringing unrelated topics into a discussion just to stir/whine up others? Not cool at all bros. I'm sure we dont want this good thread to turn into another dick measuring contest/insults. So i totally dissaprove of your comment my man. :tdown::tsk::disagree:
 
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This is not just for Japan, this is victory for all mankind !

Time for all of us: be we Japanese, Chinese, Russian, American, Indian et al, to work together. We are Mankind, We are the future...!


You forgot to mention that Hayabusa 2 sidekick MASCOT was build in germany. ;) Its a small jumping robot. Hayabusa will drop it first, it will land on the asteroid and jump around to find a right place for Hayabusa to land.
 
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Japanese have been moving forward faster than everyone could expect.
China is still unable to catch up with them.

A Vietcong such as yourself whose country can't even launch rockets or satellites or bring Vietcongs into space has no right to downplay China. Japan can't even do certain things while China has already send Chinese into orbit and close to building our own space station. This stupid comparison between China and Japan from someone coming from a backward jungle is rather amusing. Before assuming China is backward look first in the mirror.
 
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A Vietcong such as yourself whose country can't even launch rockets or satellites or bring Vietcongs into space has no right to downplay China. Japan can't even do certain things while China has already send Chinese into orbit and close to building our own space station. This stupid comparison between China and Japan from someone coming from a backward jungle is rather amusing. Before assuming China is backward look first in the mirror.


China does what we do since the 60th. I fid it annoying that China only copy old technology. Why build a primitive small space station that is smaller than the old Mir? Why only a lame moon rover that only worked a few days?

NASA has rovers on Mars. Our very own ESA has a probe on a comet and on Titan. What China does is a waste of rescources. You should join us in deep space exploration.

Look at Orion. That spaceship will bring us to Mars. NASA builds the crew module. We europeans construct the service module and propulsion. Imagine China would follow us. We could achive all so much more.

Join us so we could all walk here:

Thats sunset at Mt. Sharp:

8z4het.jpg


Don´t reinvent the wheel. Start to join us in progress.
 
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