TOKYO (AP) -- A Japanese space probe
thought to have landed on an asteroid last month may not have collected a
surface sample, calling into question the success of the unprecedented mission
to bring the extraterrestrial material back to Earth, an official said
Wednesday.
Data from
the Hayabusa probe, now hovering several miles from the Itokawa asteroid, did
not indicate that the vessel had fired a metal projectile onto the asteroid's
surface during its landing as previously thought, said Seiji Oyama of Japan's space agency, JAXA.
"Now
we just won't know till Hayabusa comes back to Earth, and we open it up,''
Oyama said.
JAXA had
announced on Nov. 26 that the Hayabusa appeared to have briefly touched down on
Itokawa, fired a metal projectile and collected the dust that was kicked up,
then lifted off again to transmit data to mission controllers.
The landing
on the asteroid about 180 million miles from Earth was Hayabusa's second,
following a faulty touchdown in mid-November. JAXA lost contact with the probe
during that attempt and didn't even realize the probe had landed until days
later _ long after it had lifted off.
Still,
there was a "slight possibility" the impact of Hayabusa's two
landings released enough particles for the probe to collect, according to
Oyama.
The probe,
launched in May 2003, is due to land in the Australian Outback in June 2007.
But a technical glitch could delay its arrival.
Hayabusa
experienced trouble with its thruster after taking off from Itokawa the second
time, forcing JAXA to shut down the ship's engines.
The agency
has until December 10 to fix the problem, before Hayabusa must start its
journey back to Earth. Any delay would make a return by June 2007 unlikely,
because the probe's orbit around the sun would take it away from Earth for two
years.
If the
Hayabusa does return to Earth with extraterritorial material, it would be the
first successful mission to return asteroid samples to Earth, JAXA said. The
2001 NASA probe of the asteroid Eros did not collect surface samples.
JAXA hopes
that examining asteroid samples will help unlock the secrets of how celestial
bodies formed, because their surfaces are be largely unchanged over the eons,
unlike those of larger bodies such as planets or moons.