Searching for Earth’s Trojan Asteroids
- Updated
Trojan asteroids are common at the L4 and L5 Lagrange points of other planets, leading or following the planet in its orbit. But detecting our own Trojan asteroids from Earth is difficult since they appear close to the sun from our perspective. In mid-February 2017, NASA's OSIRS-REx mission will search for these elusive objects when the spacecraft passes by Earth's L4 Lagrange point, en route to asteroid Bennu in 2018. Jim Green, the Director of Planetary Science at NASA, discusses OSIRIS-REx and its search for Earth's Trojan asteroids.
More information
- On long journey to asteroid hookup, OSIRIS-REx seeks 'Trojans'
- NASA: 7 Earth-sized planets orbiting star could offer signs of life
- As science march nears, questions center on role of scientists
- BASIS student's goals: Graduate, launch satellites into space
- Stars of astronomy visit Tucson for symposium
- No Trojan asteroids found, but OSIRIS-REx successfully prepares on-board cameras
- Prohibitive costs turn Tucson's March for Science into rally
- Mount Graham telescope measures changes in temperature of lava field on Jupiter moon
- Mount Lemmon Sky Center to host only open house this year
- New Jupiter findings, including massive polar cyclones, surprise scientists
- ASU's journey to asteroid Psyche is shortened by 4 years
- University of Arizona to lead global exercise on response to asteroid threat
- UA offers community members opportunity to audit science classes
- University of Arizona astronomer gets unprecedented view of exploding star
- UA scientists thrilled with OSIRIS-REx photos of Earth as it heads to asteroid
- Ordinary citizens collecting scientific data has become important to researchers
- Both finalists for NASA's next exploration mission have UA ties
- UA-led OSIRIS-REx mission catches first glimpse of asteroid Bennu
Latest video
Most Popular
-
Lake Mead's drops raise prospect of unaffordable Hoover Dam electricity -
'Copper corridor' revival could bring jobs, pollution back to Arizona town
-
Tucson's San Xavier Mission is ready for her close-up
-
Court rules Arizona AG Kris Mayes illegally withheld information
-
State budget proposal eliminates Tucson's Rio Nuevo economic development

