On January 17th in the world of astronomy, one of the most significant events occurred in 2002 when the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) Shoemaker spacecraft made an unexpected landing on the asteroid 433 Eros. This was the first time in history that a human-made object had landed on an asteroid!
The NEAR Shoemaker mission, launched by NASA in 1996, was originally designed to study Eros from orbit for a year. However, as the mission was coming to an end, NASA decided to attempt something extraordinary – landing the spacecraft on the asteroid's surface.
Picture this: A fridge-sized spacecraft gracefully descending towards a potato-shaped rock hurtling through space at mind-boggling speeds. The tension in mission control was palpable as NEAR Shoemaker began its final approach. Would it crash and burn, or pull off the seemingly impossible?
Against all odds, at 3:01:52 p.m. EST, NEAR Shoemaker gently touched down on Eros, traveling at a leisurely speed of less than 4 mph (6.4 km/h). It was like parallel parking a car in space – if your car was 196 million miles from Earth and the parking spot was moving at 64,000 mph!
The landing was so gentle that the spacecraft remained functional, continuing to send data back to Earth for two weeks after touchdown. This bonus science was like finding an extra chicken nugget in your fast-food order – unexpected but thoroughly enjoyed by the scientific community.
This audacious maneuver provided unprecedented close-up images of an asteroid's surface and valuable data about its composition. It was a giant leap for asteroid exploration and paved the way for future missions like Japan's Hayabusa and NASA's OSIRIS-REx.
So, on this day in 2002, a little spacecraft that could turned what was supposed to be its final act into a groundbreaking achievement, proving that sometimes in space exploration, it's worth taking that extra step – or in this case, that extra fall!