Noosa News
Japanese probe to light up the sky as it lands in outback Australia
“That fireball may seem like a grand finale, but for us it is our alarm telling us this is not a drill.”
The probe’s arrival back on Earth is the culmination of 10 years of effort to bring a sample of material back from a 4.6 billion-year-old asteroid.
The mission schedule for the Hayabusa2 probe.Credit:JAXA
The probe, who’s name means “peregrine falcon”, was launched in 2014 and travelled to the Ryugu asteroid, which it shadowed for over a year before sending landing craft to “hop” on to the surface, collect samples from under the surface of the asteroid, and then jump back to the main spacecraft.
Japanese scientists are hoping the samples could contain evidence to confirm theories about how life developed in the solar system.
It is…
-
Noosa News13 hours agoTwo teenagers and two adults rushed to hospital in life-threatening conditions after shocking Lawnton house fire
-
Noosa News13 hours agoFatal traffic crash, Noosa – Sunshine Coast
-
Noosa News14 hours agoA secret scheme and plans to expel former leaders — here’s what we’ve heard from Queensland’s inquiry into the CFMEU
-
Business13 hours agoTop brokers name 3 ASX shares to buy next week 23 November 2025
