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Published 15:59 22 Nov 2024 GMT
Updated 15:59 22 Nov 2024 GMT

It's a classic tale that makes us earth-bound dwellers dream about the potential riches drifting aimlessly in the void of outer space.
Well despite the far-fetched notion reminiscent of a sci-fi film, such a concept is actually very much reality.
NASA estimate that there are 1.4 million asteroids in the Solar System with each one packed with high concentrations of valuable materials such as the metals iron, nickel and gold.
However, there is one asteroid that has caught the eye of space agencies on earth, despite being known to humanity for over 150 years.
Last year, NASA launched a probe to explore asteroid 16 Psyche, which is composed of metals similar to those in the core of our own planet and the valuable aforementioned metals.
Between 30 and 60 percent of Psyche's overall volume is thought to be made up on metal, giving it an estimated worth of $10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, or £8,000 quadrillion in sterling.
This would dwarf the current global economy of around $74 trillion.
Now, the mission to explore the asteroid has successfully launched, after a SpaceX Falcon Heavy took off from Space Launch Complex 39A on October 13.
The Psyche mission aims to survey the 140-mile-wide asteroid which orbits the Sun, in between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.
The M-type asteroid was first discovered in 1852 by Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis and named after the Greek goddess Psyche.
The space rock is metal-rich, with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory saying it appears to be the “exposed nickel-iron core of an early planet”.
“Deep within rocky, terrestrial planets – including Earth – scientists infer the presence of metallic cores, but these lie unreachably far below the planets’ rocky mantles and crusts,” it says on its website.
There are no plans to somehow try and harvest the precious metals though, with NASA instead travelling to the asteroid to learn more about planetary cores and how planets form.
“Because we cannot see or measure Earth’s core directly, Psyche offers a unique window into the violent history of collisions and accretion that created terrestrial planets,” they said.
The mission had actually been set to fly last year but was pushed back due to software issues.
The spacecraft is set to travel 2.2 billion-miles (3.5 billion km) to reach the asteroid, and isn't expected to arrive at 16 Psyche until July 2029.
Psyche is the largest of nine metal-rich asteroids in our solar system, measuring 173 miles (280 km) across and 144 miles (232 km) long.
Nicola Fox, associate administrator for NASA's science mission directorate, explained, as per Space.com: "Psyche is by far the largest, and that's why we want to go to it because the smaller ones are more likely to have been changed by things impacting them, whereas the big one, we think, is going to be completely unchanged."
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