NASA
science.nasa.gov/mission/dart
dart.jhuapl.edu
Double Asteroid Redirection Test on Wikipedia
Asteroid Redirect Mission on Wikipedia
Asteroid Impact and Deflection Assessment (AIDA) on Wikipedia
science.nasa.gov/mission/dart
dart.jhuapl.edu
Double Asteroid Redirection Test on Wikipedia
Asteroid Redirect Mission on Wikipedia
Asteroid Impact and Deflection Assessment (AIDA) on Wikipedia
The Asteroid Retrieval and Utilization (ARU) mission, also known as the Asteroid Initiative, is a potential future space mission proposed by NASA. Still in the early stages of planning and development, the ARU is a mission to bring a small near-Earth asteroid into lunar orbit, where it could be further analyzed both by unmanned craft and by a future manned mission. NASA hopes to complete the mission, which may take anywhere from six to ten years, in time to accomplish its stated goal of landing humans on an asteroid by 2025.
The Asteroid Retrieval and Utilization mission, excluding any manned missions to an asteroid which it may enable, is predicted by a Keck Institute for Space Studies study to cost about $2.6 billion, of which $105 million has been proposed for 2014. NASA Administrator Charles Bolden has stated that: "This mission represents an unprecedented technological feat that will lead to new scientific discoveries and technological capabilities and help protect our home planet."
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