Can We Stop an Asteroid? The Physics Behind NASA’s DART Mission (EP. 30)
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Hosted by Lester Nare and Krishna Choudhary, this episode is a full deep dive on planetary defense. We break down NASA’s DART mission, why the goal was never to “blow up” an asteroid but to gently nudge it, and why the newest result is even bigger than the original headline: scientists can now directly detect that the Didymos–Dimorphos system changed not just locally, but in its heliocentric path around the Sun.
Summary
- DART actually worked — not just by shortening Dimorphos’s local orbit around Didymos by 33 minutes, but by measurably changing the motion of the whole binary system around the Sun.
- Planetary defense is a measurement problem — the new result hinges on detecting a velocity shift of just 11 microns per second in an asteroid system moving tens of kilometers per second.
- Why ejecta matters — the impact transferred more momentum than the spacecraft carried in, thanks to debris blasting off the asteroid and boosting the total deflection.
- Why this matters for Earth — for the first time in our planet’s history, life on Earth may actually have the tools to alter its own cosmic fate.
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Chapters
- 00:00 New single-story format
- 01:53 DART mission setup
- 18:26 Why the binary asteroid system matters
- 31:36 Measuring the heliocentric deflection
- 46:28 Planetary defense implications
- 53:37 Outro
Show Notes
- DART heliocentric deflection result — Science Advances
- NASA DART mission overview
- ESA HERA mission
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