20/05/2025
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On 13 April 2029, the 375 m asteroid Apophis will make a protected however exceptionally shut flyby of Earth. ESA is getting ready the Ramses mission, which, if totally supported on the Company’s Ministerial Council assembly in November this yr, will launch in 2028, rendezvous with the asteroid, and accompany it by way of the flyby.
Ramses will use a collection of scientific devices on the primary spacecraft and two smaller CubeSats that can be deployed at Apophis to conduct a radical before-and-after survey of the asteroid’s form, floor construction, cohesion, orbit, rotation and extra.
Earth’s gravity will induce tidal forces within the asteroid which can be prone to alter a few of these properties through the flyby. By analysing these modifications, Ramses will assist scientists study extra about how an asteroid responds to exterior forces. That is necessary data for assessing how finest to deflect a hazardous asteroid if we uncover one on a collision course with Earth sooner or later.
Ramses’ first CubeSat, introduced in March, will conduct radar sounding to study extra concerning the inside construction of Apophis and analyse its surrounding mud atmosphere.
The second CubeSat, led by Emxys, can be deployed from the primary spacecraft just some kilometres from Apophis. It’ll research the asteroid’s form and geological properties and can perform an autonomous method manoeuvre earlier than trying to land on the floor. If the touchdown is profitable, it’ll additionally measure the asteroid’s seismic exercise.
“Touchdown on an asteroid could be very difficult,” says Ramses Venture Supervisor Paolo Martino. “The irregular form and floor properties make it tough to determine a secure touchdown website, whereas the very weak gravity makes it onerous to remain on the floor with out bouncing off and drifting away.”
“However the alternative to review Apophis from the floor throughout this uncommon pure phenomenon could be very thrilling and scientifically precious. Ramses’ CubeSats will try increased danger, excessive reward actions that the primary spacecraft can’t, resembling a touchdown. In doing so, they’ll assist us maximise the mission’s scientific return, which is essential, as an asteroid this massive is assumed to go so near Earth solely as soon as each few thousand years.”
“This venture marks a milestone for our firm,” mentioned José A. Carrasco, CEO of Emxys. “To contribute to a mission that can monitor one among Earth’s closest encounters with a big asteroid represents the very best degree of scientific and technological problem. We’re proud to carry our capabilities to Europe’s planetary defence efforts.”
Becoming a member of Emxys within the European consortium growing the CubeSat are GomSpace (Denmark), GMV (Spain), ISAE-SUPAERO (France), and the Royal Observatory of Belgium. Emxys contributed to the GRASS gravimeter on the Juventas CubeSat carried by ESA’s Hera mission, which is presently en path to the Didymos binary asteroid system to review the aftermath of humankind’s first try at asteroid deflection.