Japan's Asteroid Probe to Head Home Despite Glitch

On Saturday, the Hayabusa probe apparently landed on the Itokawa asteroid and collected surface samples. After the landing, the probe hovered about three miles from the asteroid and appeared to be shaking due to a possible gas leak from a thruster, JAXA said.

The probe shut down all its engines Saturday and switched to solar power while JAXA investigated the problem.

''We will meet that deadline, whatever happens,'' Matogawa said. Otherwise, it would be two more years before the probe _ orbiting the sun between Earth and Mars together with the asteroid _ would be in the right position to return, he said.

But the agency will not know for sure if Hayabusa collected surface samples until it returns to Earth. It is expected to land in Australia's Outback in June 2007, more than four years after its launch in May 2003.

The landing on the asteroid was Hayabusa's second, following a faulty touchdown earlier this month. JAXA lost contact with the probe during that attempt and did not even realize it had landed until days later _ long after it had lifted off.

The Hayabusa mission is part of Japan's efforts to expand its space exploration program. Earlier this year, JAXA said it would send its first astronauts into space and set up a base on the moon by 2025.

  • Japanese Probe Collects Asteroid Samples
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