The University of Arizona’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft has opened its eyes and sent back images of stars as it begins its seven-year journey.
Four days after blasting off from Cape Canaveral on Sept. 8, the spacecraft's star tracker, a navigational tool, took pictures of stars to confirm its attitude, or the direction it is pointing.
NASA and the UA-based mission said in a press release the spacecraft was about 2 million miles from Earth as of Thursday morning. It’s traveling more than 12,000 miles an hour on its way to circle the sun before coming back and passing Earth in a year.
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Next week, spacecraft controllers will check the scientific instruments on board, including the UA’s cameras; two spectrometers, including one built by Arizona State University; a laser altimeter; and an X-ray imaging system. That testing will last for about a week.
OSIRIS-REx is the first U.S. spacecraft destined to visit an asteroid. When it arrives, it will study the asteroid Bennu, sweep up a sample and return it to Earth, due back in 2023.