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NASA’s highly-anticipated Psyche asteroid mission has been delayed by 24 hours because of bad weather.
The US space agency was targeting today for lift-off, but will now attempt the launch at 10:19 ET (15:19 BST) tomorrow from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Psyche is a spacecraft built to explore a 4.5 billion-year-old asteroid called 16 Psyche, which scientists think may be packed full of iron, nickel and gold with a value in excess of $10,000 quadrillion (£8,072 quadrillion).
That’s enough money to make everyone on Earth a billionaire — although even if NASA is able to confirm this is the case, there are currently no plans to extract the precious metals.
The orbiter was due to launch today on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket but when storms barrelled in from the Gulf of Mexico last night, NASA made the decision to push this back by at least a day.
On hold: NASA ‘s highly-anticipated Psyche asteroid mission has been delayed by 24 hours because of bad weather
Where it’s going: Psyche is a spacecraft built to explore a 4.5 billion-year-old asteroid called 16 Psyche, which scientists think may be packed full of iron, nickel and gold with a value in excess of $10,000 quadrillion (£8,072 quadrillion)
The US space agency and SpaceX are hoping to take advantage of the better weather forecast for Friday — or if that is a no-go then the next launch window on Saturday.
However, on both days weather forecasters say there is only a 50 per cent chance for ‘go conditions’, with storms still lurking.
If Psyche does not blast off by Saturday, NASA and SpaceX will have until the launch window closes on October 25 to reschedule.
When it does launch, the US space agency will be hosting live coverage for the public to watch.
This is due to begin at 09:15 ET (14:15 BST) tomorrow on the NASA Television media channel, while commentary will be added from 09:30 ET (14:30 BST) as the launch build-up is aired on the US space agency’s YouTube, X, Facebook, Twitch and Daily Motion channels.
It will also be shown on the NASA app and the space agency’s website.
Psyche’s launch had already been delayed once, with the $1.2 billion (£988 million) spacecraft originally scheduled to blast into space on October 5, only for this to be put back by a week so that engineers could update the configuration of its thrusters.
Fascinating: The irregular and potato-like asteroid (depicted) is believed to be the exposed core of a demolished protoplanet — the building blocks of the rocky planets in our solar system: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars
Plan: The US space agency and SpaceX are hoping to take advantage of better weather forecast for Friday — or if that is a no-go then the next launch window on Saturday
Launch time: NASA is targeting a lift-off at 10:19 ET (15:19 BST) tomorrow (Friday) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida
When it does reach orbit, Psyche will embark on a six-year, 2.2 billion-mile (3.6 billion-kilometre) trip to a space rock of the same name, 16 Psyche.
This 170-mile-wide (280 kilometre) asteroid sits in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.
No spacecraft has ever visited an object like 16 Psyche – thought to have a surface containing substantial amounts of metal rather than rock or ice – but if all goes to plan the orbiter will arrive at its destination in July 2029.
The irregular and potato-like asteroid is believed to be the exposed core of a demolished protoplanet — the building blocks of the rocky planets in our solar system: Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars.
If so, it could provide a unique opportunity to study how planets like our own formed.
Scientists say the space rock is most likely a survivor of multiple violent hit-and-run collisions, common when the solar system was forming.
During this smash-up and merging of smaller planetesimals, the resulting bigger objects start out completely molten.
Heavy metals then sink to the core, while lighter rock floats to the top.
With 16 Psyche, however, NASA thinks that after reaching this stage it was then hit by another asteroid which stripped it of its rocky mantle and left behind a bare metal core that has been detected today.
Spectroscopic studies and radar observations suggest its surface is up to 95 per cent nickel and iron, a composition similar to that of Earth’s core.
If 16 Psyche is in fact loaded with precious metals, it could be worth a huge amount of money, according to Dr Linda Elkins-Tanton, a space scientist at MIT.
How the journey will work: The spacecraft will embark on a six-year, 2.2 billion-mile (3.6 billion-kilometre) trip to a space rock of the same name, 16 Psyche. It will require a gravity assist from Mars in May 2026 to help it on its way, before arriving at its destination in 2029
Location: The 170-mile-wide (280 kilometre) asteroid sits in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter
She has calculated that the iron in 16 Psyche alone would be worth $10,000 quadrillion (£8,072 quadrillion).
Assuming the market for asteroid materials is on Earth, this could cause the value of precious metals to plummet, completely devaluing all holdings including those of governments, and all companies involved in mining, distributing and trading such commodities.
Ultimately, it could lead to the collapse of the entire economy.
Of course it’s all speculative and hypothetical, because even if the space rock was worth anywhere close to that kind of money, it’s not like it could easily be brought back to Earth and there are currently no plans to do so.
16 Psyche was actually only the 16th asteroid ever discovered, having been spotted in 1852 by Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis.
It has an average diameter of some 136 miles (220 kilometres) and contains about 1 per cent the total mass of the entire asteroid belt — around 440 billion billion pounds (220 billion billion kilograms) to be exact.
NASA’s probe is 81ft (25 metres) long and 24ft (7 metres) wide, making it roughly the size of a tennis court with its solar panels extended
All in all, it is estimated that the Psyche mission will cost NASA around $1.2 billion (£988 million)
That makes it among the 12 largest minor planets orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter.
The Psyche spacecraft will carry with it several instruments, including two high-resolution cameras and a spectrometer to determine the asteroid’s composition.
It also has a magnetometer to check if the space rock has a remnant magnetic field, along with an instrument to measure its gravitational field.
The orbiter will spend a total of 21 months orbiting the asteroid while capturing the first-ever images of 16 Psyche.
The hope is that by mapping and studying the asteroid in such detail it will help researchers determine how it came to be, which could in turn shed light on the formation of our own planet.