The debris from the DART crash was blown into a huge tail behind the asteroid.

Space 3 October 2022

There is a person by the name ofLeah Crane.

Astronomers using the NSF???s NOIRLab???s SOAR telescope in Chile captured the vast plume of dust and debris blasted from the surface of the asteroid Dimorphos by NASA???s DART spacecraft when it impacted on 26 September 2022. In this image, the more than 10,000 kilometer long dust trail ??? the ejecta that has been pushed away by the Sun???s radiation pressure, not unlike the tail of a comet ??? can be seen stretching from the center to the right-hand edge of the field of view.

There is a tail of debris coming off the asteroid.

M. Knight and T. Kareta are from theLowell Observatory.

A long tail of debris has been created by the asteroid Dimorphos after it was hit by a spaceship. An image from two days after the impact shows the debris that was left behind.

The dust and rocks of Dimorphos measure about 10,000 kilometers. Astronomers used the Southern Astrophysical Research Telescope to take the picture.

DART wanted to shift the asteroid's path around Didymos. The aftermath of the collision will help researchers figure out how to protect Earth from potentially dangerous asteroids in the future, although Dimorphos and Didymos are both harmless.

Immediately after the collision, there was a huge cloud of dust surrounding Dimorphos, and in the days that followed, the cloud stretched into a tail behind the asteroid. The radiation from the sun pushes material into a stream behind the object.

The internal structure of Dimorphos is one of the main factors that influence how an impact changes the rock. A rock with a strong interior is more likely to be hit than a weak one.

Researchers will be able to look at the fresh surface left behind when the cloud clears. The European Space Agency plans to use telescopes on the ground or in the sky to observe the aftermath of an impact.

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