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Asteroid

Hayabusa2’s 2031 Landing Plan Faces an Unexpected Asteroid Nightmare
Gaming Gear

Hayabusa2’s 2031 Landing Plan Faces an Unexpected Asteroid Nightmare

by admin September 18, 2025


On December 6, 2020, the Hayabusa2 spacecraft dropped off pristine samples from asteroid Ryugu in the Australian outback, becoming the world’s second asteroid sample return mission, after the first Hayabusa mission returned dusty samples from asteroid Itokawa in 2010. But Hayabusa2 still has more to offer.

That same spacecraft is currently on its way to another distant space rock, aiming to snag more samples to help scientists compile the solar system’s origin story. Recent observations of the asteroid, however, reveal that Hayabusa2 might not be able to touch down on its new target.

Asteroid 1998 KY26 is a small, lumpy near-Earth object thought to contain about a million gallons of water. It rotates so quickly that a day on the rock ends almost as soon as it begins, according to NASA. Hayabusa2 is set to rendezvous with the asteroid in 2031 as part of its extended mission to collect more dust and rock straight from the source.

Now, using multiple observatories around the world, astronomers gathered more data on Hayabusa2’s new target and found that it is nearly three times smaller and spinning much faster than originally thought, according to a new paper published in Nature Communications.

Not clear for landing

The researchers behind the new paper combined the recent observations with previous radar data, revealing that the asteroid is a mere 36 feet (11 meters) wide, as opposed to 98 feet (30 meters). What’s more, the asteroid is spinning about twice as fast as earlier data suggested.

“We found that the reality of the object is completely different from what it was previously described as,” Toni Santana-Ros, a researcher from the University of Alicante, Spain, and lead author of the new paper, said in a statement. “One day on this asteroid lasts only five minutes!”

Hayabusa2’s first target measured at nearly 3,000 feet (900 meters) wide. The spacecraft landed on asteroid Ryugu on February 22, 2019, for the first time, then returned for a second touchdown in July 2019 to collect subsurface samples from a crater it had created with its first landing. Shortly before dropping off its samples on Earth, Japan’s space agency (JAXA) announced an extension to Hayabusa2’s mission and a lucky second target.

A bigger challenge awaits

Unlike its first target, however, Hayabusa2’s second landing will prove far more challenging due to the asteroid’s small size and fast rotation. The team behind the new study used the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope and other instruments to observe 1998 KY26 in preparation for the mission’s upcoming encounter.

“The amazing story here is that we found that the size of the asteroid is comparable to the size of the spacecraft that is going to visit it! And we were able to characterize such a small object using our telescopes, which means that we can do it for other objects in the future,” Santana-Ros said. “Our methods could have an impact on the plans for future near-Earth asteroid exploration or even asteroid mining.”

This has the makings of a very interesting rendezvous! Now we just have to wait—impatiently—for 2031 to arrive.



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September 18, 2025 0 comments
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The Xenomorph on an Alien: Earth poster
Esports

How to watch skyscraper-size asteroid zoom past Earth on livestream

by admin September 17, 2025



A skyscraper-size asteroid named 2025 FA22 will make a close approach to Earth this week, and you can watch it happen live online.

The asteroid, measuring between 427 and 951 feet across, will pass by in the early hours of Thursday, September 18. It is set to come within 520,000 miles of Earth, about twice the distance of the moon, while traveling at around 24,000 mph.

Discovered in March by the Pan-STARRS 2 telescope in Hawaii, 2025 FA22 briefly raised concerns when early calculations suggested a slim chance of impact in 2089. It was even added to the European Space Agency’s Risk List, which tracks near-Earth objects with the potential to hit the planet. Updated observations have since ruled out any threat, and the asteroid was removed from the list in May.

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How to watch the asteroid

The Virtual Telescope Project will broadcast the flyby using its telescope in Manciano, Italy. The free livestream begins Wednesday, September 17, at around 11 p.m. EDT.

For those with stargazing gear, the asteroid may also be visible. At its peak, it could reach an apparent magnitude of 13, making it just bright enough for a solid backyard telescope or binoculars. Tools like TheSkyLive.com can help track its position in the night sky.

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NASA’s Goldstone radar telescope in California and other observatories worldwide will also monitor the asteroid closely, gathering more details about its size and shape.

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September 17, 2025 0 comments
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The Dorfromantik devs are back with Star Birds, an enchanting asteroid factory game that's out now in early access
Game Updates

The Dorfromantik devs are back with Star Birds, an enchanting asteroid factory game that’s out now in early access

by admin September 12, 2025


Where do you go after making Dorfromantik, the 14th best puzzle game on PC? Unto infinity, chick. Unto infinity, and all the uranium-packed celestial masses it contains. Berlin-based Toukana Interactive are back with Star Birds – another “soft strategy” sim and laidback resource management game, in which you take charge of an avian asteroid-mining operation.

The just-released early access build endeared itself to me instantly by having my bird captain quack like an Apple Macintosh, then sealed the deal with a procession of delightfully rotatable space boulders, some of which look like spangly Easter eggs and some of which look like handfuls of Emmental. Don’t call this a review, mind – I’ve barely played an hour, and the game won’t leave early access until at least this time next year – but I get the feeling Toukana are onto a good thing here. Another nice flourish: optional supply quests are presented as little dovecot windows from which a feathery Wesley Crusher peeks forth, waiting for you to accept their errand.

Watch on YouTube

An overview: Star Birds is broken into missions narrated by a cast of wisecracking astral warblers. The abundance of text dialogue is slightly stifling, for a puzzle game, but I suspect it’ll taper off beyond the initial tutorial sections. Each mission sees you parking your mothership next to a new asteroid field, and zooming on individual asteroids to build things and set up a production network. It starts with you socketing a launchpad into a crater, placing excavators on resource fields, and linking them to your launchpad with pipes to shuttle resources back to the mothership.

As the levels and story progress, you unlock and research new facilities, including chem labs that combine two kinds of resource into one. You’ll rarely find every resource you need for the quest at hand on any one asteroid. So you must build landing sites for rockets, and start moving resources between asteroids. All of this proceeds at a leisurely pace: no hazards, no mission timer.

The UI consists of phat, pastel, pressable buttons that are begging for a touchscreen port. Pretty much every action is performed with the mouse. It feels like they’re treading a delicate line between efficiency and whimsy in terms of the controls, I must admit. I can imagine being annoyed by the act of dragging out snarls of pipework between structures, in a game with more threat or urgency, particularly because pipes can’t overlap. You’ll probably have to go back and unravel them, whenever you need to alter the layout of your roids.

In the context, though, I find the slight tangliness attractive. This is a factory sim that also wants to be a toy, and has so far stuck the landing. If you’re short of credits for construction, you can also pop down a buggy and drag out a path for it between piecemeal gold outcrops.

I suspect Dorfromantik players might find Star Birds too fussy, next to the bucolic immediacy of popping down six-sided tiles, but people who loved Slipways and have at least a tolerance for ornithology puns should enjoy this. As may people who liked the vibe of Cobalt Core, at the risk of setting a roguelike amongst the pigeons. You can find Star Birds on Steam.



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September 12, 2025 0 comments
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Justin Sun, founder of Tron
Gaming Gear

Crypto Bros’ ‘Startup Nation’ Wants to Plant a Flag on an Asteroid

by admin August 26, 2025


The “Network State” movement, described by its detractors as a “cult,” is an ideological movement that seeks to create privately owned, anarcho-capitalist, “autonomous” communities. One such community, the Republic of Liberland, recently made two announcements that its denizens seem to think are quite exciting: 1) Liberland has a new “prime minister” in the form of crypto billionaire Justin Sun, and 2) the bold explorers of Liberland plan to express their collective spirit of adventure by planting a flag on an asteroid.

First, the Sun thing. Sun, who is the founder of the Tron blockchain and is so rich that he once bought (and ate) a $6 million banana, was actually voted in as Liberland’s PM last October. Since then, it’s not entirely clear what Sun has been doing, although the community appears to be pushing for greater legitimacy and political influence. Liberland, whose community was originally founded in 2015, actually lays claim to an area of physical land between the borders of Serbia and Croatia, although Croatian border police are, according to Wired, not known to recognize the settlement. Its community is tied together largely by libertarian sentiments and an affinity for crypto. Wired writes:

Over the years, Liberland has been funded in large part by wealthy crypto donors, attracted by the prospect of a state built around the same libertarian principles on which crypto was founded. Liberland has itself released two crypto coins—one as a medium of exchange and the other for voting in elections—and developed its own national blockchain.

Alternative economic systems may be an overarching theme, but lately, Liberland’s biggest priority seems to be launching its brand into outer space. This brings me to the fledgling country’s other exciting development: its mission to plant a flag on an asteroid.

To be clear, Liberland has already planted a flag in space—although the flag sounds like it may have been more akin to an NFT than an actual flag. Indeed, according to the micro-nation’s website, a version of its flag was planted on the moon in March by a mission flown by Firefly Aerospace, an American rocket company. However, the flag is described as being “part of a digital artifact collection housed within the LifeShip Pyramid.” Not familiar with the LifeShip Pyramid? It’s a “specially designed capsule ensuring its [contents] preservation in the Moon’s harsh environment.” LifeShip, itself, is a company whose primary service is to collect a swab of your saliva, extract your DNA, and then send it to the moon.

Stop me when your brain starts hurting.

Anyway, the “digital artifact collection” thing makes Liberland’s moon flag sound somewhat dubious, but the country also has another lunar mission scheduled to occur at some point in the next few months: “A second lunar mission is scheduled later this year, again carrying a physical Liberland flag to reinforce our symbolic mark on the Moon,” the nation’s website says. The nation also has plans to plant a flag on an asteroid. “Liberland is embarking on its most daring adventure yet: a commercial Lifeship mission to a near-Earth asteroid,” the website says. “On this mission, the Liberland flag—bearing engravings of citizen names—will travel into deep space, marking the first commercial asteroid mission to carry a national flag, and highlighting our pioneering spirit.”

If all of this sounds really cool to you, there’s still a chance for you to get your name engraved on that asteroid flag by giving Liberland money (registered residents can qualify if they donate $2k to the cause), or, if you’re not a Liberland denizen, by registering to be one by September 4th. Gizmodo reached out to Sun and the Free Republic of Liberland for more information.

The Liberlanders’ website makes them seem almost cute in their preoccupations with bloodless (largely digital) colonialism, but there’s a sense beneath it all that these are people with way too much money and time on their hands. Indeed, planting a flag on an asteroid actually sorta seems like a good metaphor for the Network State movement writ large—a symbolically laden but rather pointless activity that will cost a lot of money and be logistically near-impossible to achieve.



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August 26, 2025 0 comments
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