Updated
Updated · WIRED · May 25
Psyche Probe Skims 4,609 Kilometers Above Mars, Capturing Images to Calibrate Instruments
Updated
Updated · WIRED · May 25

Psyche Probe Skims 4,609 Kilometers Above Mars, Capturing Images to Calibrate Instruments

9 articles · Updated · WIRED · May 25
  • NASA’s Psyche spacecraft passed within 4,609 kilometers of Mars, using the flyby to gather thousands of images of the planet’s surface and atmosphere during close approach.
  • The maneuver served a dual purpose: Mars’s gravity nudged the probe onto its path toward the asteroid belt, while onboard cameras, magnetometers and gamma-ray and neutron spectrometers were calibrated against the planet’s terrain and atmosphere.
  • Released images show rugged Martian terrain, craters and the south polar cap, where water ice is present, giving mission teams early data to test image-processing tools planned for use at asteroid Psyche.
  • After the flyby, the spacecraft’s trajectory shifted by 1 degree and its speed reached 1,600 kilometers per hour, with arrival at the metallic asteroid Psyche targeted for August 2029.
  • Once there, the probe will orbit and map the asteroid—thought to be part of a planetesimal core—to help scientists better understand how rocky planets, including Earth, formed internally.
What hurdles must Psyche overcome during its three-year cruise before its 2029 asteroid rendezvous?
If asteroid Psyche is not a planetary core, what could its metallic nature reveal about our solar system's chaotic origins?