How Does NASA's plan to stop killer asteroids (DART) Work?

NASA has a plan called DART to stop killer asteroids by giving them a big push.

Imagine you're playing tag on a playground, and a huge asteroid is like a kid who runs super fast toward you, really fast. NASA wants to make that kid slow down or even change direction so it doesn’t hit Earth.

To do this, they send a spaceship called DART (which stands for Double Asteroid Redirection Test) to crash into the asteroid at full speed, like when one kid bumps another in tag, but way bigger and faster. This bump gives the asteroid a push, changing its path just enough so it might miss Earth.

How It's Like Bumping a Ball

Think of an asteroid as a big ball rolling toward you on a hill. If you give that ball a quick kick (like DART does), it might roll in a different direction, maybe even back down the hill instead of hitting you!

NASA watched this happen with special cameras, and they saw the asteroid move, just like how you see a ball change direction after you kick it.

This test helps NASA learn how to stop asteroids that could one day come toward Earth. It's like practicing for a big game of tag, but with space rocks!

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. A spaceship hits an asteroid to change its path, like pushing a toy car out of the way.
  2. If a big rock is coming toward Earth, NASA sends another rock to bump it off course.
  3. Imagine you're playing dodgeball, DART is like throwing a ball at another ball to make it move.

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity