海角大神

Japanese space probe returns home Sunday

The Japanese spacecraft won't survive re-entry, but it will launch a small capsule containing collected space material that hopefully lands in Australia.

In this March 15, 2010 artist rendering by Akihiro Ikeshita, a disc-shaped container, center, which is expected to be carrying space sample of asteroid Itokawa, not shown, is detached from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA's space probe Hayabusa, right, as it approaches the Earth, left. The probe is scheduled to return to Earth on Sunday.

AP Photo/Akihiro Ikeshita, HO

June 11, 2010

Space scientists are preparing to watch a spacecraft crash back to Earth on Sunday after a seven-year trip through the solar system. Japan鈥檚 Hayabusa probe 鈥 the name means Falcon 鈥 will make a fiery descent above a remote part of the Australian Outback following a rendezvous with a distant asteroid.

Before it is destroyed by intense heat as a blazing fireball it will fire off a capsule, carrying fragments collected from the 540-meter long asteroid named Itokawa, which will hopefully land safely.

Around 30 NASA scientists aboard a Douglas DC-8 aircraft will attempt to track the rare re-entry and the capsule carrying the samples. Re-entry is due at around 3pm UK time 鈥 the middle of the night in Australia.

IN PICTURES: Asteroids

Japan鈥檚 space agency JAXA this week successfully directed the Hayabusa probe so that it is on course to crash into the atmosphere over remote Woomera, at 7.58 miles per second.

狈础厂础鈥檚 chief investigator Peter Jenniskens, of the Ames Research Center in California, said: 鈥淗ayabusa is hurtling toward Earth at an immense speed, comparable to that of an asteroid impact.

鈥淭he capsule that protects the asteroid sample will be only 6,500ft ahead of the rest of the spacecraft, which will break into numerous pieces, essentially making it a man-made meteor.鈥

Hayabusa was launched in May 2003 and reached its target asteroid in September 2005 after a 2 billion mile journey through space. It twice brushed the surface of Itokawa 鈥 the first ever landings on an asteroid 鈥 . A mini-probe the size of a tea-caddy called Minerva that it launched to hop around on the asteroid failed however.

Following the soft landings, fuel and power failures led Japanese scientists to fear that Hayabusa was out of control and lost. Remarkably they managed to regain control over the following months.

An asteroid sample will be priceless for scientists because they are pristine material from the birth of the planets more than 4 billion years ago and can help them learn how the solar system evolved. The last sample that was successfully brought to Earth was of in January 2006.

狈础厂础鈥檚 at Esperance, 360 miles from Perth, in July 1979.

鈥 Discover space for yourself and do fun science with a telescope. Here is Skymania鈥檚 advice on . We also have a . Check out too!

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IN PICTURES: Asteroids