Smashing success: NASA asteroid strike results in big nudge

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Smashing success: NASA asteroid strike results in big nudge
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NASA says a spacecraft that plowed into a small, harmless asteroid millions of miles away last month succeeded in shifting its orbit.

stretching several thousand miles . It took consecutive nights of telescope observations from Chile and South Africa to determine how much the impact altered the path of the 525-foot asteroid around its companion, a much bigger space rock.

Apollo astronaut Rusty Schweickart, a co-founder of the nonprofit B612 Foundation, dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid strikes, said he's “clearly delighted, no question about that” by the results and the attention the mission has brought to asteroid deflection. “We really need to also have that warning time for a technique like this to be effective," said mission leader Nancy Chabot of Johns Hopkins University’s Applied Physics Laboratory, which built the spacecraft and managed the $325 million mission.— short for Double Asteroid Redirection Test — was destroyed when it slammed into the asteroid 7 million miles away at 14,000 mph .

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