Space

OSIRIS-REx is leaking asteroid samples due to jammed lid

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Images confirmed that the sampler head had collected an abundance of material and was leaking
NASA
Images confirmed that the sampler head had collected an abundance of material and was leaking
NASA
Asteroid sample material slowly leaking from the sampler head
NASA

Images returned by NASA's OSIRIS-REx asteroid explorer have confirmed that the spacecraft's sample collector head is slowly leaking some of the material it gathered from the surface of the asteroid Bennu on October 20, 2020.

When OSIRIS-REx's Touch-And-Go Sample Acquisition Mechanism (TAGSAM) head made contact with Bennu, its one job was to release a blast of nitrogen gas to stir up soil and small rocks, which it would then collect. Since this autonomous operation was completed and the spacecraft withdrew to a safe distance from the asteroid, NASA scientists have been examining images sent back by cameras to determine if the exercise was successful.

It turned out to be a case of good and bad news. The good news is that the TAGSAM head worked perfectly at just the right angle to the asteroid's surface, collecting material to a depth of several centimeters.

The bad news is that, while the apparatus did collect enough material beyond the minimum of 2 oz (60 g) to meet one of the main mission requirements, it turns out that some larger pieces of rock jammed open the mylar flap that forms the lid of the sampler, and soil is slowly leaking out.

Asteroid sample material slowly leaking from the sampler head
NASA

To prevent more sample material being lost, the mission team has decided to alter the scheduled program to avoid any movement of the spacecraft. Instead of carrying out Saturday's Sample Mass Measurement activity and a course correction burn on Friday, the team will now concentrate on shifting the sample to the Sample Return Capsule (SRC) for safekeeping on the return to Earth.

Meanwhile, the spacecraft is reported to be in good health.

"Bennu continues to surprise us with great science and also throwing a few curveballs," says Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administrator for science. "And although we may have to move more quickly to stow the sample, it’s not a bad problem to have. We are so excited to see what appears to be an abundant sample that will inspire science for decades beyond this historic moment."

Source: NASA

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6 comments
windykites
If the opening is facing forward, the particles should stay in the container.
newest atlasian
Theres no atmosphere and no gravity they told me, obviously someones got it mixed up if this thing is "leaking"
paul314
The mass measurement rotation was supposed to figure out if they had enough sample, but I guess that's pretty much answered.

@windykites the whole thing is pretty much in free fall, so "forward" is not such a meaningful term. (Also, if -- and this is a big if -- any of the material they collected includes volatiles, it could be moving of its own accords.)
KADC
No-one planned for this seemingly obvious possibility? This scenario never came up in testing? Seriously?
d0ugparker
I wish the team were more transparent in their explanation of what's happening. Media reporting process also introduces gaps in the factual accounts of what's happening, so there are lots of places where inaccuracies can be introduced. There's also a cultural norm of attacking 1st, helping 2nd. Still, impressive though.
Kevin Ritchey
At least it’s not an engineering flaw such as confusing English and Metric measurements...or is it? (Just kidding this time).