WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:14.548 --> 00:00:18.085 OSIRIS-REx is NASA's first asteroid sample return mission. 2 00:00:18.085 --> 00:00:21.622 So, OSIRIS-REx will spend about two years journeying to asteroid 3 00:00:21.622 --> 00:00:22.289 Bennu. 4 00:00:22.289 --> 00:00:24.725 Once we get there we'll spend a couple years surveying the 5 00:00:24.725 --> 00:00:27.561 surface of the asteroid to find the best place to get a sample 6 00:00:27.561 --> 00:00:30.998 from and then we'll go ahead and return it to Earth and have that 7 00:00:30.998 --> 00:00:34.034 sample for scientists to study in perpetuity. 8 00:00:34.034 --> 00:00:36.270 OSIRIS-REx is an amazing mission. 9 00:00:36.270 --> 00:00:39.840 It's the third mission in the New Frontiers line, a PI-led 10 00:00:39.840 --> 00:00:42.943 mission to go to asteroid Bennu, collect a sample and bring it 11 00:00:42.943 --> 00:00:43.944 back to the Earth. 12 00:00:43.944 --> 00:00:47.381 Asteroid Bennu contains isotopes, minerals and chemicals 13 00:00:47.381 --> 00:00:50.250 from the early solar system and by studying these on Earth, 14 00:00:50.250 --> 00:00:52.486 we'll better understand the origin of the solar system, the 15 00:00:52.486 --> 00:00:54.721 origin of planets, perhaps even the origin of life. 16 00:00:59.660 --> 00:01:02.696 Bennu was chosen as the target asteroid from the science team 17 00:01:02.696 --> 00:01:06.099 after evaluating three critical criteria: the first of which was 18 00:01:06.099 --> 00:01:07.000 accessibility. 19 00:01:07.000 --> 00:01:08.936 So Bennu is really optimal. 20 00:01:08.936 --> 00:01:12.239 It has an orbit of about 1.2 years and it passes by Earth 21 00:01:12.239 --> 00:01:13.106 every six years. 22 00:01:13.106 --> 00:01:15.676 Second criteria was the size. 23 00:01:15.676 --> 00:01:18.512 We needed something large enough to where it wasn't rotating too 24 00:01:18.512 --> 00:01:19.179 fast. 25 00:01:19.179 --> 00:01:22.082 The smaller the body, typically the faster it rotates. 26 00:01:22.082 --> 00:01:24.518 We wanted something that we would be able to do close 27 00:01:24.518 --> 00:01:27.788 proximity operations with, all that detailed mapping we want to 28 00:01:27.788 --> 00:01:31.391 do of the surface, and we wanted something that was rotating at a 29 00:01:31.391 --> 00:01:34.594 speed that we could be able to match, and then slowly lower 30 00:01:34.594 --> 00:01:36.430 ourselves to retrieve that sample. 31 00:01:36.430 --> 00:01:39.232 The third criteria was the composition. 32 00:01:39.232 --> 00:01:42.469 We wanted an asteroid that was pristine, that had a known 33 00:01:42.469 --> 00:01:46.440 geologic context that was carbon-rich and Bennu really fit 34 00:01:46.440 --> 00:01:48.642 the mold for all three of those criteria, 35 00:01:48.642 --> 00:01:50.644 and that's why it's the destination asteroid. 36 00:01:52.980 --> 00:01:57.250 OSIRIS-REx arrives at Bennu in August of 2018 and our mission 37 00:01:57.250 --> 00:01:59.920 profile is designed to get us ever closer to the surface of 38 00:01:59.920 --> 00:02:02.589 the asteroid to understand the nature of its surface. 39 00:02:02.589 --> 00:02:06.093 What we really want to know is, can we get the spacecraft down 40 00:02:06.093 --> 00:02:07.661 to the point where we want to get the sample? 41 00:02:07.661 --> 00:02:09.029 We call that deliverability. 42 00:02:09.029 --> 00:02:12.733 If we reach that point, will the spacecraft remain safe? Meaning 43 00:02:12.733 --> 00:02:15.802 it can get away from the asteroid and still be functional 44 00:02:15.802 --> 00:02:17.971 especially for returning a sample to the Earth. 45 00:02:17.971 --> 00:02:21.008 And then we also want to know if we touch down on that spot, will 46 00:02:21.008 --> 00:02:22.275 we get a sample? 47 00:02:22.275 --> 00:02:24.211 We call that the sampleability assessment. 48 00:02:24.211 --> 00:02:27.514 So those are the key parameters that drive our observation 49 00:02:27.514 --> 00:02:31.151 planning of Bennu and we're going to spend about 10 months 50 00:02:31.151 --> 00:02:34.121 globally mapping the asteroid and then performing detailed 51 00:02:34.121 --> 00:02:36.456 site reconnaissance of specific locations where we think we want 52 00:02:36.456 --> 00:02:37.524 to get the sample. 53 00:02:41.094 --> 00:02:42.262 Status check. 54 00:02:42.262 --> 00:02:43.430 Go Atlas. 55 00:02:43.430 --> 00:02:44.598 Go Centaur. 56 00:02:44.598 --> 00:02:45.866 Go OSIRIS-REx. 57 00:02:45.866 --> 00:02:48.835 What I personally am most excited about for the OSIRIS-REx 58 00:02:48.835 --> 00:02:51.905 mission will be the first images that we get when approaching 59 00:02:51.905 --> 00:02:52.572 Bennu. 60 00:02:52.572 --> 00:02:55.575 So right now we have a sense of what Bennu looks like and what 61 00:02:55.575 --> 00:02:58.645 its shape is from ground-based assets like Arecibo and the 62 00:02:58.645 --> 00:03:01.515 Goldstone radars, but we won't know what the shape is 63 00:03:01.515 --> 00:03:02.282 completely. 64 00:03:02.282 --> 00:03:05.686 We won't have a perfect sense of it until we actually encounter 65 00:03:05.686 --> 00:03:06.353 the asteroid. 66 00:03:06.353 --> 00:03:10.157 I am going to be really excited when those images come back. 67 00:03:10.157 --> 00:03:14.461 For me, getting that sample back to Earth is the most exciting 68 00:03:14.461 --> 00:03:17.364 part because we will have something that preserves 69 00:03:17.364 --> 00:03:20.300 material from over four and a half billion years ago. 70 00:03:20.300 --> 00:03:22.102 Who doesn't want that? 71 00:03:22.102 --> 00:03:25.639 So sample return is really the most exciting part, I think, of 72 00:03:25.639 --> 00:03:26.506 this mission. 73 00:03:26.506 --> 00:03:30.343 I've been working on OSIRIS and its precursor concepts since 74 00:03:30.343 --> 00:03:31.011 2004. 75 00:03:31.011 --> 00:03:32.746 The launch is about the halfway point. 76 00:03:32.746 --> 00:03:35.782 So for me, launch is a major milestone, but not the most 77 00:03:35.782 --> 00:03:37.217 exciting part of the mission. 78 00:03:37.217 --> 00:03:40.420 The most exciting part is the stories that Bennu has to tell 79 00:03:40.420 --> 00:03:42.422 us that we haven't even thought of yet. 80 00:03:42.556 --> 00:03:46.059 And liftoff of OSIRIS-REx! 81 00:03:46.059 --> 00:03:51.298 Its seven-year mission: to boldly go to the asteroid Bennu 82 00:03:51.298 --> 00:03:52.699 and back. 83 00:03:52.699 --> 00:03:59.306 [ Launch audio ] 84 00:03:59.306 --> 00:04:08.648 [ Satellite beeping ]