Three months into an interplanetary cruise expected to last three-and-a-half years, Japan’s $300 million Hayabusa 2 mission is in good health as it begins an ion-powered pursuit of an asteroid to return a piece of it to Earth.
The robotic spacecraft is already traveling more than 20 million miles from Earth after launching Dec. 3, and Japanese officials say the probe has passed health checks and is ready for the long-distance journey ahead.
The Hayabusa 2 spacecraft “completed its initial functional confirmation period on March 2, 2015, as all scheduled checkout and evaluation of acquired data were completed,” the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said in a statement. “The explorer has been under inspection for about three months after its launch on Dec. 3, 2014.”
The probe carries four ion thrusters to nudge it on course toward asteroid 1999 JU3, a carbon-rich world just 900 meters — about 3,000 feet — across with a tenuous gravity field 60,000 times weaker than Earth’s.