NASA's Lucy Mission is about to make an Earth flyby on its way to Jupiter's Trojan asteroids and the flyby may be visible to some parts of the globe while it passes. You can join Reddit AMA with mission scientists and navigators to ask questions about the mission and know more about it today, October 13. "Our #LucyMission is about to make an Earth flyby on its way to Jupiter's Trojan asteroids, and may be visible to some parts of the globe while it passes. Join us for a @Reddit AMA with mission scientists and navigators on Oct. 13 from 1pm ET (1700 UTC). http://reddit.com/r/NASA," NASA Solar System tweeted.
"Later this week, NASA's Lucy mission to explore the Trojan asteroids is about fly past Earth in a gravity assist maneuver (that will actually be visible from some places on the ground!), and NASA would like to mark this milestone by hosting an AMA about Lucy and the Earth flyby with experts from NASA and our Lucy mission partners. A new post will go up here a few hours before the AMA begins, so stay tuned!," NASA posted on Reddit.
NASA's Lucy mission is the first spacecraft launched to explore the Trojan asteroids, a population of primitive asteroids orbiting in tandem with Jupiter. The mission will explore a record-breaking number of asteroids, flying by one asteroid in the solar system's main asteroid belt, and by seven Trojan asteroids, according to the research organisation.
According to NASA, the spacecraft is traveling at roughly 67,000 mph (108,000 kph) on a trajectory that will orbit the Sun and bring it back toward Earth in October 2022 for the spacecraft's first gravity assist. That maneuver will accelerate and direct Lucy's trajectory beyond the orbit of Mars. The spacecraft will then swing back toward Earth
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