By being able to use Mars-based data for an unusual observation, we learned more about the interstellar comet's path through our Solar System in a valuable test case for planetary defence, even though 3I/ATLAS does not pose any danger.
The Mars probe got about ten times closer to 3I/ATLAS than telescopes on Earth and it observed the comet from a new viewing angle. The triangulation of its data with data from Earth helped to make the comet's predicted path much more accurate.
While the scientists initially anticipated a modest improvement, the result was an impressive ten-fold leap in accuracy, reducing the uncertainty of the object's location.
Because 3I/ATLAS is passing through our Solar System fast, travelling with speeds up to 250,000 km/h, it will soon vanish into interstellar space, never to return. The improved trajectory allows astronomers to aim their instruments with confidence, enabling more detailed science of the third interstellar object ever detected.
The astronomers in the planetary defence team at ESA's Near-Earth Object Coordination Centre, used to determining the trajectories of asteroids and comets, had to account for the spacecraft's special location.
Usually, trajectory observations are made from fixed observatories on Earth, and occasionally from a spacecraft in near-Earth orbit, like the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope or NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope. The astronomers are well-practiced in considering their location as they determine the future locations of objects, called ephemeris.
This time, the ephemeris of 3I/ATLAS, and in particular the prediction's precision, depended on accounting for the exact location of ExoMars TGO: at Mars and in a fast orbit around it. It required working together in a combined effort by several ESA teams and partners, from flight dynamics to science and instrument teams. Challenges and subtleties that are usually negligible, had to be tackled to reduce the margins as much as possible, in order to achieve the highest accuracy possible.
The resulting data on comet 3I/ATLAS is the first time that astrometric measurements from a spacecraft orbiting another planet have been officially submitted and accepted into the Minor Planet Center (MPC) database. The database acts as a central clearing house for asteroid and comet observations, streamlining data collected by different telescopes, radar stations and spacecraft.
Practicing with spacecraft data beyond Earth orbit hones important skills and demonstrates the value of leveraging resources not designed for asteroid detection, boosting readiness in case of a threat.
We should not only count on spacecraft hopefully being in the vicinity of hard-to-observe objects that might pose a threat. Therefore, ESA is preparing the Neomir mission, to cover the known blind spot that the Sun causes for asteroid observations, its bright glow outshining the faint glimmer of an asteroid or comet. Neomir will be located between the Sun and Earth to detect near-Earth objects coming from the Sun's direction at least three weeks in advance of potential Earth impact.
Icy wanderers such as 3I/ATLAS offer a rare, tangible connection to the broader galaxy. To actually visit one would connect humankind with the Universe on a far greater scale. ESA is preparing the Comet Interceptor mission that will learn more about a comet - with luck, it just might be an interstellar one.
Related Links
European Space Agency
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology
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