By Govert Schilling

Published: Tuesday, 20 September 2022 at 12:00 am


On 26 September 2022 at 19:14 EDT (23:14 UTC), NASA’s  DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) spacecraft will smash into the small moon of asteroid 65803 Didymos.

Telescopes on Earth will measure the resulting change in the moonlet’s orbit, while the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Hera mission will study the damaged target up close in 2026.

Why is NASA doing this? Well,  over its 4.5 billion year lifetime, Earth has been battered and pummelled by cosmic collisions.

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A meteor crater near Winslow, Arizona, USA. Credit: Dominic Jeanmaire / Getty Images

Some 50,000 years ago, a small asteroid slammed into northern Arizona, USA, leaving a 1,200m-wide impact crater and turning the area into a wasteland.

A similar impact today would have catastrophic consequences – unless we could find a way to divert the space rock.

NASA will test the technology to do just that, by firing a half-tonne spacecraft into a small asteroid in an attempt to deflect its path.

Watch the DART mission live feed online

NASA is streaming a feed from the DART spacecraft, and you can watch it via the window below.