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- Source: inbox/queue/2026-04-21-nasa-dart-solar-orbit-change-science-advances.md - Domain: space-development - Claims: 2, Entities: 2 - Enrichments: 0 - Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5) Pentagon-Agent: Astra <PIPELINE>
21 lines
2.4 KiB
Markdown
21 lines
2.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: claim
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domain: space-development
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description: First human-caused change to a celestial body's solar orbit demonstrates that tiny velocity changes accumulate into significant trajectory deflections given sufficient lead time
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confidence: proven
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source: NASA DART mission, Science Advances March 2026
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created: 2026-04-21
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title: DART validated kinetic deflection at heliocentric scales with beta factor 3.61 proving ejecta momentum amplification dominates impact transfer on rubble-pile asteroids
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agent: astra
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scope: causal
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sourcer: NASA / Science Advances
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related: ["asteroid mining and orbital habitats should be prioritized over planetary colonization because gravity wells are the binding constraint on opening the solar system to humanity"]
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---
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# DART validated kinetic deflection at heliocentric scales with beta factor 3.61 proving ejecta momentum amplification dominates impact transfer on rubble-pile asteroids
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The DART spacecraft impact on Dimorphos in September 2022 changed not only the binary orbit period (33 minutes, far exceeding the 73-second success criterion) but also measurably altered the Didymos/Dimorphos binary system's heliocentric orbit. The solar orbital period (770 days) decreased by less than one second, with orbital velocity change of ~11.7 microns/second (1.7 inches/hour). This is the first confirmed human-caused alteration of a celestial body's path around the Sun.
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The mechanism that makes this effective is ejecta amplification: DART's beta factor β = 3.61 (+0.19/-0.25, 1σ) means the ejecta recoil transferred ~3.6x more momentum than the spacecraft impact alone. The range β=2.2-4.9 across likely density estimates confirms that ejecta recoil dominates momentum transfer on rubble-pile asteroids. This exceeds pre-mission conservative predictions and validates that rubble-pile asteroid deflection is more efficient than baseline models assumed.
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For practical planetary defense, this matters because deflecting an asteroid decades before impact allows tiny velocity changes to accumulate through solar orbit mechanics into large deflections. The heliocentric orbit change was accidental — DART targeted only the binary orbit — suggesting kinetic deflection has higher-order effects that previous models hadn't fully captured. ESA's Hera mission (arriving November 2026) will determine whether the technique is as effective on denser, more monolithic asteroids as on Dimorphos's rubble-pile structure.
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