Skip to main content

How to watch Japan’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft deliver a slice of asteroid today

Mission Control Live:Hayabusa2 Capsule Reentry Operation

Japan’s Hayabusa2 spacecraft will soon be returning a sample of asteroid to Earth. The sample is safely stowed away in a capsule that will re-enter Earth’s atmosphere and land in the Australian desert, and we’ve got the details on how you can watch this event live.

What’s happening with the capsule landing

In order to ensure the asteroid sample is safely returned to Earth, it is encased in a capsule which recently separated from the Hayabusa2 spacecraft. The sample comes from the asteroid Ryugu, located around 200 million miles away where the spacecraft stayed for 17 months.

Hayabusa2 landed on the asteroid in February 2019, which was an impressive feat as the asteroid is only 900 meters (2,952 feet) wide. It collected a sample from the surface by firing a “bullet” at the asteroid in order to throw up dust and particles which could be collected. Five months later, in July 2019, the spacecraft successfully collected a subsurface sample from the asteroid as well. The spacecraft began its journey back to Earth approximately one year ago, bringing its precious cargo with it.

Now it has arrived back at Earth, and the challenge is to get the sample from the spacecraft to the ground. The spacecraft itself won’t be landing — it’ll be heading off to explore another asteroid on a journey that should take another 10 years. But as it flies past Earth, it has released a capsule containing the sample of asteroid Ryugu, and it’s this capsule that will be landing today.

How to watch the capsule landing

Coverage of the capsule re-entry into the atmosphere will begin today, Saturday, December 5, at 9:00 a.m. PT. Re-entry itself is scheduled for 9:28 a.m. PT, when it will enter the “fireball phase” as it blasts through the atmosphere. The parachute will be deployed a few minutes later, and the landing of the capsule is scheduled for 9:47 a.m. ET in a sparsely populated area of Woomera, Australia.

Officials will collect the sample from Woomera and take it to a Quick Look Facility. It will then be shared with researchers around the globe. They hope that studying the sample can aid in understanding the formation of the solar system and can show how radiation affects materials from the asteroid’s surface.

The coverage will be shown on JAXA’s YouTube channel, which you can watch here, or using the embedded video at the top of this page.

Editors' Recommendations

Georgina Torbet
Georgina is the Digital Trends space writer, covering human space exploration, planetary science, and cosmology. She…
How to watch a SpaceX Dragon depart the ISS on Monday
(Nov. 27, 2022) --- The SpaceX Dragon cargo craft, loaded with over 7,700 pounds of science, supplies, and cargo, approaches the International Space Station while orbiting 259 miles above the African continent.

This week will see a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft depart from the International Space Station (ISS) and head back to Earth. Though the craft will be uncrewed, it will be packed with the results of scientific experiments performed on the space station.

NASA Live: Official Stream of NASA TV

Read more
How to watch the Quadrantids meteor shower this week
A shower of Perseid meteors lights up the sky in 2009 in this NASA time-lapse image.

As the new year arrives, this is the perfect time to catch the Quadrantids meteor shower. Along with other skywatching tips for January, this is a great opportunity to enjoy a sight of the night sky which you can view without needing any special equipment.
What to expect from the Quadrantids meteor shower
The Quadrantids meteor shower happens once per year when the Earth passes through a patch of debris in its orbit. This debris includes small chunks of rock that enter the atmosphere and burn up, creating meteor streaks across the night sky. These patches of debris are typically left by comets, though in the case of the Quadrantids it was an asteroid called asteroid 2003 EH1 which caused the debris responsible for the shower.

The Quadrantids is one of the biggest meteor showers of the year, running from December through to January. But the shower will peak next week, so that's the best time to head out and look up if you're hoping to catch a meteor or two.
How to watch the Quadrantids meteor shower
The Quadrantids shower will peak over the evening of January 3 to January 4, though you may be able to catch some meteors in the sky in the days before and after as well. But your best chance for a great view will be to go out late in the evening of January 3, or just before dawn on January 4, as there will be a bright moon out which will be nearly full and which will make it harder to spot meteors.

Read more
How to watch SpaceX launch a private lunar lander tonight
kplo launch korea moon screenshot 2022 08 06 132442

Overnight tonight, Saturday, December 11 to Sunday, December 12, SpaceX will launch a Falcon 9 rocket starting a private Japanese lander on a journey to the moon. The launch from Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida will be livestreamed, and we've got the details on how you can watch below.

ispace M1 Mission
What to expect from the launch
The Falcon 9 will be carrying the ispace HAKUTO-R Mission 1, which will be deployed from the rocket around one hour after launch. The lander will then travel on to the moon, taking several months on its journey before a scheduled landing on the moon in April 2023. The aim is to create a commercial lunar lander that can carry both private and government payloads to the moon. This time, the lander will be carrying a rover called Rashid from the United Arab Emirates, as part of the UAE's first lunar mission.

Read more