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E-mail this article For Immediate Release
January 13, 2005
Contacts: Lee Tune, 301 405 4679 or ltune@umd.edu

Deep Impact Mission Launched Toward Comet

Deep Impact HomeThe Deep Impact Mission is off!CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.- It was midnight New Year's Eve, Christmas morning, Thanksgiving and Labor Day all rolled into one. At least it felt that way for University of Maryland astronomer Michael A'Hearn, and his Deep Impact colleagues on January 12 when the spacecraft for NASA's Deep Impact mission successfully launched into a blue Florida sky on a six-month journey to encounter a speeding comet.

"We are all elated at the successful launch," said A'Hearn, principal investigator for the Deep Impact mission. "For the last couple of days it has been a challenge not to worry, since in the last stages, the launch is out of our hands. Now that we are in flight and talking to the spacecraft, we will resume all our testing to ensure that we are successful when we get to Comet Tempel 1."

"That was awesome," said a jubilant Lucy McFadden, University of Maryland research scientist and co-investigator for the mission. "We're heading for the heart of Tempel 1," she said as the Deep Impact spacecraft disappeared into the sky.

"It is exciting, humbling and a little frightening to go out into the unknown," she reflected after some minutes. "But we've got a great team here, so it will be all right."

Led by A'Hearn and his Maryland team, the Deep Impact project will be the first mission to smash a hole in a comet and reveal the secrets of its interior. Comets are balls of ice, gas and dust that orbit the sun. Scientists believe that the permanently frozen cores of comets contain primitive debris from the solar system's formation some 4.5 billion years ago.

"The information we gain from Deep Impact should significantly improve our understanding of how our solar system formed," says A'Hearn. "It also will increase our knowledge of the density and composition of comets, information that could be vital should a comet ever threaten Earth."

A July 4th Collision

Courtesty NASA/JPLDeep Impact consists of two spacecraft, a flyby spacecraft that is about the size of a sub-compact car and an "impactor" the size of a large (3 ft. x 3 ft.) garbage can. At the beginning of July, after a voyage of some 268 million miles, the joined spacecraft will reach their target, Comet Tempel 1. The spacecraft will approach the comet and collect images of it. Then, 24 hours before the July 4th impact, the flyby spacecraft will launch the copper impactor into the path of the onrushing comet.

Like a copper penny pitched into the grill of a speeding tractor-trailer truck, the 820-pound impactor will hit the comet at a collision speed of some 23,000 miles per hour. With a kinetic energy equivalent to almost 5 tons of TNT, the projectile will smash a crater into the comet. A'Hearn and his fellow scientists expect the crater to range in size from that of a house to a football stadium, and from two to fourteen stories deep. They expect to see ice and dust ejected from the crater revealing pristine material beneath. The impact will not affect the orbit of Tempel 1, which poses no threat to earth.

Courtesy NASA

Deep Impact's flyby spacecraft will collect pictures and data of the event and send them back to Earth. There will also be many other "eyes" watching the impact. NASA's Chandra, Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes will be observing from near-Earth space. Professional and amateur astronomers on Earth also will observe the material flying from the comet's newly formed crater.

The data from all these sources will be analyzed and combined with that from other missions to provide a better understanding of both the solar system's formation and of the risk of comets some day again colliding with Earth as has happened in the distant past.

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