Psyche Mission Uses Mars Flyby to Target Metal-Rich Asteroid

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Source: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) (.gov)
Psyche Mission Uses Mars Flyby to Target Metal-Rich Asteroid
Photo: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) (.gov)
TL;DR Summary

NASA’s Psyche spacecraft completed a Mars flyby on May 15, 2026, coming within 2,864 miles (4,609 km) of the planet to perform a gravity assist that boosted its speed by about 1,000 mph and nudged its orbital plane by roughly 1 degree, setting it on a course to the metal-rich asteroid Psyche in 2029. The encounter also served as a calibration run for the spacecraft’s cameras and instruments and yielded high-resolution views of Mars, including the south polar ice cap. After Mars, Psyche will resume its solar-electric propulsion-powered voyage to the main asteroid belt, where it will map and study Psyche to test whether it represents the exposed core of an early planetesimal and could reveal insights into rocky planets like Earth.

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