Skip to main content

ESA moves forward with its first ‘planetary defense’ mission

The European Space Agency (ESA) officially announced its first planetary defense mission to deflect asteroids from Earth. 

The $153.3 million project, called Hera, was initiated under an official contract on Tuesday, September 15, and is expected to be ready to launch by October 2024 and reach its destination by the end of 2026. Hera will travel to a near-North binary asteroid system called 65803 Didymos (or the Didymos pair), to perform six months of close-up studies. 

Hera is part a collaboration with NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirect Test (DART) spacecraft as part of the Asteroid Impact & Deflection Assessment (AIDA). 

A digital rendition of Hera scanning DART’s impact crater. ESA – Science Office

NASA’s DART (scheduled to launch in the summer of 2021) will perform a kinetic impact on the smaller of the two asteroids in an attempt to alter its course. Hera’s mission will follow up on DART with a detailed post-impact survey to record the moment of impact and collect as much data as possible to assess collision effects.

Data collected by Hera should enable scientists to further develop the technology as they work to create a viable system for deployment in the event of a serious asteroid threat to Earth.

Besides collecting data, Hera will also demonstrate technologies like autonomous navigation, which it will use to move around the asteroid. 

Hera will also deploy Europe’s miniature satellites known as ‘CubeSats’ for further asteroid surveying in deep space.

The ESA also recently announced that it’s working on its own version of a reusable rocket, which will work similarly to SpaceX’s Falcon 9. The Prometheus would be used in European rockets like the Ariane 6 and its successors to make rocket launches considerably cheaper.

Editors' Recommendations

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Groundbreaking Solar Orbiter mission will capture first images of sun’s poles
Illustration of ESA's Solar Orbiter

ESA's Solar Orbiter mission will face the Sun from within the orbit of Mercury at its closest approach. ESA/ATG medialab

On Sunday, February 9, NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) are banding together to launch a new mission to study our sun up close: The Solar Orbiter, which will peer at previously unseen areas of the sun to learn about the complex inner life of our star.
Imaging the sun's poles for the first time
Solar Orbiter – the Sun close-up

Read more
Your Google Photos app may soon get a big overhaul. Here’s what it looks like
The Google Photos app running on a Google Pixel 8 Pro.

Google Photos is set to get a long-overdue overhaul that will bring new and improved sharing and notification features to the app. With its automatic backups, easy sorting and search, and album sharing, Google Photos has always been one of the better photo apps, and now it's set to get a whole slew of AI features.

According to an APK teardown done by Android Authority and the leaker AssembleDebug, Google is now set to double down on improving sharing features. Google Photos will get a new social-focused sharing page in version 6.85.0.637477501 for Android devices.

Read more
The numbers are in. Is AMD abandoning gamers for AI?
AMD's RX 7700 XT in a test bench.

The data for the first quarter of 2024 is in, and it's bad news for the giants behind some of the best graphics cards. GPU shipments have decreased, and while every GPU vendor experienced this, AMD saw the biggest drop in shipments. Combined with the fact that AMD's gaming revenue is down significantly, it's hard not to wonder about the company's future in the gaming segment.

The report comes from the analyst firm Jon Peddie Research, and the news is not all bad. The PC-based GPU market hit 70 million units in the first quarter of 2024, and from year to year, total GPU shipments (which includes all types of graphics cards) increased by 28% (desktop GPU shipments dropped by -7%, and CPU shipments grew by 33.3%). Comparing the final quarter of 2023 to the beginning of this year looks much less optimistic, though.

Read more