Thứ Năm, 20 tháng 6, 2019

The European Space Agency is building a ‘comet interceptor’ to uncover space secrets

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The European Space Agency (ESA) announced yesterday that it's planning to make a 'comet interceptor' probe within the next eight years. The probe aims to capture details of a comet not seen before, when it enters our solar system.

The comet interceptor will consist of three spacecrafts: one main unit and two smaller units. All three speacecrafts will separate weeks before approaching the comet and capture different data about the object, object, like the make-up of its nucleus, gas, dust, and plasma environment. Scientists will use this data to create a 3D model of the celestial body, and use it to study origins of comets. 

In its previous missions, ESA probes examined comets regularly appearing in our solar systems like Rosetta's comet (occurs every 6.5 years) and Halley's (occurs every 76 years). With the new probe, the space agency is expecting to study a comet from Oort's cloud, a theoretical belt of celestial bodies that surrounds the outer reaches of the sun's realm.