Introducing Ramses, ESA’s mission to asteroid Apophis (2024)

Space Safety

16/07/202410862 views88 likes

ESA /Space Safety /Planetary Defence

30 years ago, on 16 July 1994, astronomers watched in awe as the first of many pieces of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet slammed into Jupiter with incredible force. The event sparked intense interest in the field of planetary defence as people asked: “Could we do anything to prevent this happening to Earth?”

Today, ESA’s Space Safety programme takes another step towards answering this question. The programme has received permission to begin preparatory work for its next planetary defence mission – the Rapid Apophis Mission for Space Safety (Ramses).

Ramses will rendezvous with the asteroid 99942 Apophis and accompany it through its safe but exceptionally close flyby of Earth in 2029. Researchers will study the asteroid as Earth’s gravity alters its physical characteristics. Their findings will improve our ability to defend our planet from any similar object found to be on a collision course in the future.

Apophis

Roughly 375 m across, about the size of a cruise liner, the asteroid Apophis will pass within 32 000 km from Earth’s surface on 13 April 2029. For a short time, it will be visible to the naked eye in clear, dark skies for around two billion people across much of Europe and Africa and parts of Asia.

Apophis will miss Earth: astronomers have ruled out any chance that the asteroid will collide with our planet for at least the next 100 years. But the Apophis flyby in April 2029 is an extremely rare natural phenomenon.

By analysing the sizes and orbits of all known asteroids, astronomers believe that an object this large comes this close to Earth only once every 5000 to 10 000 years. For comparison, a total solar eclipse takes place somewhere on Earth around once every 18 months, and Comet Halley returns to Earth’s skies every 76 years.

The 2029 Apophis flyby will draw the attention of the entire world and represents a unique opportunity for science, planetary defence and public engagement.

Ramses

ESA’s Ramses spacecraft will rendezvous with Apophis before it passes Earth and accompany the asteroid during the flyby to observe how it is warped and changed by our planet’s gravity.

Patrick Michel Director of Research at CNRS at Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur in Nice, comments: "There is still so much we have yet to learn about asteroids but, until now, we have had to travel deep into the Solar System to study them and perform experiments ourselves to interact with their surface.”

“For the first time ever, nature is bringing one to us and conducting the experiment itself. All we need to do is watch as Apophis is stretched and squeezed by strong tidal forces that may trigger landslides and other disturbances and reveal new material from beneath the surface."

Ramses needs to launch in April 2028 to allow for an arrival at Apophis in February 2029, two months before the close approach. In order to meet this deadline, ESA requested permission to begin preparatory work on the mission as soon as possible using existing resources. This permission has been granted by the Space Safety programme board. The decision whether to commit to the mission in full will take place at ESA’s Ministerial Council Meeting in November 2025.

Using a suite of scientific instruments, the spacecraft will conduct a thorough before-and-after survey of the asteroid’s shape, surface, orbit, rotation and orientation. By analysing how Apophis changes during the flyby, scientists will learn a lot about the response of an asteroid to external forces as well as asteroid composition, interior structure, cohesion, mass, density, and porosity.

These are all very important properties for assessing how best to knock a hazardous asteroid off a collision course with Earth. As asteroids are also time capsules formed over four billion years ago, data from Ramses will also offer new scientific insights into the formation and evolution of the Solar System.

NASA, meanwhile, has redirected its OSIRIS-REx spacecraft towards Apophis. Due to the limits of orbital mechanics, the newly renamed OSIRIS-APEX will arrive at Apophis roughly one month after the asteroid’s Earth flyby.

Researchers anticipate Earth's tidal forces altering the asteroid’s rotational state and possibly triggering quakes and landslides. Having Ramses there in advance will provide a detailed 'before and after' view of how Apophis has been altered by its close encounter. Then, in the aftermath, having two highly capable spacecraft at Apophis after the flyby will enable additional scientific investigations and the measurement of longer-term effects.

Rapid reconnaissance: a cornerstone for planetary defence

The international collaboration between NASA’s DART asteroid impactor and ESA’s Hera asteroid detective is demonstrating that, in principle, humankind can redirect an asteroid if needed. But to react to a real hazard, we need to be able to build and deploy a response quickly.

Richard Moissl, heading ESA's Planetary Defence Office, explains: “Ramses will demonstrate that humankind can deploy a reconnaissance mission to rendezvous with an incoming asteroid in just a few years. This type of mission is a cornerstone of humankind’s response to a hazardous asteroid. A reconnaissance mission would be launched first to analyse the incoming asteroid’s orbit and structure. The results would be used to determine how best to redirect the asteroid or to rule out non-impacts before an expensive deflector mission is developed.”

Paolo Martino, leading ESA's Ramses effort, adds: "The Ramses mission concept reuses much of the technology, expertise and industrial and science communities developed for the Hera mission. Hera demonstrated how ESA and European industry can meet strict deadlines and Ramses will follow its example."

Introducing Ramses, ESA’s mission to asteroid Apophis (2024)

FAQs

What is the summary of Apophis? ›

Overview. Asteroid 99942 Apophis is a near-Earth object (NEO) estimated to be about 1,100 feet (335 meters) across. When it was discovered in 2004, Apophis was identified as one of the most hazardous asteroids that could impact Earth.

What will happen if Apophis hits Earth? ›

What would happen if Apophis hit Earth? Apophis would cause widespread destruction up to several hundred of kilometers from its impact site. The energy released would be equal more than 1,000 megatons of TNT, or tens to hundreds of nuclear weapons.

What is the mission to Apophis? ›

The programme has received permission to begin preparatory work for its next planetary defence mission – the Rapid Apophis Mission for Space Safety (Ramses). Ramses will rendezvous with the asteroid 99942 Apophis and accompany it through its safe but exceptionally close flyby of Earth in 2029.

What asteroid will hit the Earth in 2036? ›

In 2036, Apophis will pass the Earth at a third the distance of the Sun in both March and December. Using the 2021 orbit solution, the Earth approach on March 27, 2036, will be no closer than 0.3089 AU (46.21 million km; 28.71 million mi; 120.2 LD), but more likely about 0.3097 AU (46.33 million km; 28.79 million mi).

What was Apophis goal? ›

Since Apophis was seen as a constant threat to the order of the universe, his ultimate goal was to devour the sun god Ra and plunge the world into eternal darkness. As such, Apophis was an important figure in Egyptian religious beliefs and rituals.

What asteroid will hit Earth in 2024? ›

NASA is closely monitoring an asteroid that is approaching the Earth on May 22, 2024. It has been classified to be part of the Apollo Group. The asteroid has been named '2024 JG 15' and it is set to approach the Earth on May 22, 2024. It measures 205 feet and is the size of an airplane.

Is April 13 2029 the end of the world? ›

On April 13, 2029 — a Friday, no less — when Apophis, formally known as (99942) Apophis, makes its closest approach to Earth, it will become so prominent over our planet that it will visible with the unaided eye.

What meteor killed the dinosaurs? ›

Around 66 million years ago, an asteroid bigger than Mount Everest smashed into Earth, killing off three quarters of all life on the planet—including the dinosaurs. This much we know. But exactly how the impact of the asteroid Chicxulub caused all those animals to go extinct has remained a matter of debate.

What is the biggest asteroid threat to Earth? ›

1. Bennu. Discovered in September 1999 and officially designated "101955 Bennu (1999 RQ36)," the near-Earth asteroid Bennu currently poses the greatest risk of impacting our planet — but fortunately, not for some time.

What happens to Apophis? ›

After many years of war against his fellow Goa'uld and the Tau'ri, Apophis' fleet was destroyed in the Vorash system and Apophis himself was finally killed for good when his ship crashed into his new homeworld of Delmak in 2001 thanks to SG-1 and the Replicators.

What does Apophis want? ›

The demonic God Apophis is a primordial beast which dwells in the realm of Shadow; also called the Tenth Region of the Night or Bakhu, a great mountain to the west of the void where the creature sleeps just before the dawn. Entropy embodied, Apophis is driven to devour all of Creation.

How close is Apophis now? ›

Distance from Earth

The distance of Asteroid 99942 Apophis from Earth is currently 306,971,829 kilometers, equivalent to 2.051980 Astronomical Units. Light takes 17 minutes and 3.9478 seconds to travel from Asteroid 99942 Apophis and arrive to us.

Can Apophis destroy Earth? ›

Apophis is a peanut-shaped space rock spanning around 1,100 feet (340 meters) across that was left behind by the formation of the solar system around 4.6 billion years ago. The chunky space rock is not hefty enough to be considered a "planet killer" asteroid but is large enough to wipe out a large city.

Will the asteroid in 2028 destroy Earth? ›

Montage of our solar system. Asteroid 1997 XF11 will pass well beyond the Moon's distance from Earth in October 2028 with a zero probability of impacting the planet, according to astronomers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA.

When was the last time the Earth was hit by a life threatening asteroid? ›

Ten years ago, as the sun rose over Chelyabinsk, Russia, the sky exploded. On February 15, 2013, an asteroid slammed into Earth's atmosphere at nearly 70,000 kilometers per hour.

What is the story of Apep Apophis? ›

Apep, also known as Apophis in Greek, was the Egyptian god of chaos. Apep was the polar opposite of the godly personification of order, Ma'at, and the chief enemy of the king of the gods, the sun-god Ra. He took the form of a great snake. The Egyptians believed that the sun was Ra traveling along a boat in the heavens.

What is the truth about Apophis? ›

Apophis is a peanut-shaped space rock spanning around 1,100 feet (340 meters) across that was left behind by the formation of the solar system around 4.6 billion years ago. The chunky space rock is not hefty enough to be considered a "planet killer" asteroid but is large enough to wipe out a large city.

Why was Apophis evil? ›

Apophis became the enemy of the sun god because the sun was the first sign of the created world and symbolized divine order, light, life, and if he could swallow the sun god, he could return the world to a unity of darkness.

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