NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft passes above Mars' south pole in this artist's concept illustration. The spacecraft has been orbiting Mars since October 24, 2001. NASA
NASA will tweak the orbital path of its $297 million Mars Odyssey orbiter on Tuesday to take it out of the way of potentially damaging super-speed dust from a massive comet that will fly very close to the Red Planet on Oct. 19.
NASA already made one unannounced change to the path of its other Mars spacecraft, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and it plans to carry out a final maneuver on Aug. 27.
The danger comes from Comet C/2013 A1 Siding Spring, which was discovered in January 2013 and is estimated to be about half a mile in size.
Mars scientist Richard Zurek said the orbiters won't be in the direct path of the oncoming space boulder, but they could accidentally meet up with its trail of dust: particles that are roughly the size of grains of sand that are traveling around 35 miles per second. (By contrast, a bullet from an average 9 mm handgun travels at about 1,400 feet per second.)
'That's like a cannonball for our spacecraft,' Zurek said. One piece of debris at that speed could rupture an orbiter's fuel line or take out its electronics, he says.
The comet poses no threat to us Earthlings.
Currently, NASA has two orbiters circling Mars with a third expected to arrive in September.
NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) spacecraft is on its way to the Red Planet and will enter orbit on Sept. 21. The MAVEN team is planning to change its flight path on Oct. 9.
The goal is to have all three flying safely over the opposite side of Mars when the comet flies by on Oct. 19.
As a bonus, NASA will be able to use the orbiters to study the comet as it passes by the Red Planet.
Entities 0 Name: NASA Count: 5 1 Name: Zurek Count: 1 2 Name: Mars Odyssey Count: 1 3 Name: Richard Zurek Count: 1 4 Name: NASA NASA Count: 1 5 Name: Comet Count: 1 6 Name: Red Planet Count: 1 7 Name: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Count: 1 Related 0 Url: http://ift.tt/1omuF2S Title: Celestial Traveler, Closing on Mars Description: One day early last year, the Australian comet hunter Robert H. McNaught spotted something unusual from his post at the Siding Spring Observatory in the foothills of the Warrumbungle Mountains. As a member of a team sponsored by NASA that searches the skies for potentially dangerous asteroids and comets, he generally focuses on objects that orbit the sun on the same plane as the planets.
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