NASA’s DART Spacecraft Successfully Slams into Asteroid in Historic Test of Planetary Defense

It was a cosmic smash-up watched around the world.

A NASA spacecraft on Monday intentionally slammed into an asteroid in a historic test of humanity’s ability to protect Earth from a potentially catastrophic collision with a space rock.

The agency’s DART probe, short for Double Asteroid Redirection Test, carried out the first-of-its-kind maneuver on a small and harmless space rock known as Dimorphos, which is currently located roughly 6.8 million miles away from Earth.

The $325 million mission was designed to see whether “nudging” an asteroid can alter its trajectory, providing scientists with a valuable real-world test of planetary defense technologies.

The DART spacecraft, which is about the size of a vending machine, crashed into Dimorphos on Monday at 7:14 p.m. ET, flying head-on into the space rock at 14,000 miles per hour. It may take up to several weeks for NASA to confirm any changes to the space rock’s trajectory, but the goal is to shorten the asteroid’s nearly 12-hour orbit by several minutes.

In a real-life planetary defense situation, even a small change to an asteroid’s trajectory — provided it is still far enough — could suffice to avert a doomsday impact.

Dimorphos measures 525 feet wide and orbits a much larger, 2,500-foot asteroid named Didymos. Neither Dimorphos nor Didymos pose a threat to Earth, according to NASA.

The DART spacecraft launched into space in November 2021 and spent 10 months journeying to its asteroid target.

The probe is not expected to survive the crash, but a small, Italian-built satellite that was deployed as part of the mission will fly within 25 to 50 miles of Dimorphos a few minutes after the impact to snap photos of the aftermath.

In the days and weeks ahead, ground-based telescopes will be used to study Dimorphos and time its orbit. A subsequent mission led by the European Space Agency, scheduled to launch in 2024, will study the impact crater on the asteroid and study Dimorphos and Didymos in greater detail.

NASA is hoping the DART crash will take up to 10 minutes off Dimorphos’ orbit around Didymos. Over time, that relatively small change is expected to grow. If successful, it would demonstrate the effectiveness of carrying out such a maneuver when a potentially hazardous asteroid is millions of miles away.

The DART mission is functioning as a proof-of-concept of asteroid deflection as a planetary defense strategy. Data from the test will not only demonstrate whether the idea works, but also help NASA understand how it could be applied in the future.

NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office is tasked with searching for near-Earth objets that could pose a threat to the planet. The agency said no known asteroid larger than 450 feet across has a significant chance of hitting Earth in the next 100 years, but scientists have warned that only a fraction of smaller near-Earth objects have been found.

Though the prospect of “killer asteroids” may sound far-fetched, the threat is all too real, said Bruce Betts, chief scientist at the Planetary Society, a nonprofit organization that conducts research, advocacy and outreach to promote space exploration.

The most well-known example of a cataclysmic impact occurred around 66 million years ago, when the Chicxulub asteroid, thought to have been between 6 to 10 miles wide, slammed into Earth and triggered a sudden mass extinction. The incident annihilated the dinosaurs and killed almost three-quarters of all the plants and animal species that were living on Earth at the time.

The largest asteroid impact in recorded history took place 114 years ago, when a space rock exploded over a remote part of Siberia in 1908. The incident, which came to be known as the “Tunguska explosion,” flattened trees over 500,000 acres of uninhabited forest, according to NASA. Mysteries remain about the Tunguska incident, but scientists have said the impact was likely caused by a space rock measuring between 164 and 262 feet across.

Even much smaller space rocks can cause widespread damage.

In 2013, a tennis court-sized space rock measuring about 65 feet wide streaked across the sky and exploded in the atmosphere roughly 20 miles over Chelyabinsk, Russia.

The explosion released energy equivalent to approximately 440,000 tons of TNT, according to NASA. The blast and its shock wave blew out windows and flattened trees over an area covering hundreds of square miles. More than 1,600 people were injured in the incident.

“Chelyabinsk was a wake-up call,” Betts said. “People started taking it much more seriously after that, and the idea of planetary defense became much more accepted publicly.”

Betts added that he hopes the DART mission will continue to raise awareness about the importance of planetary defense.

“It’s preparing for an unusual kind of disaster, because it has the potential for catastrophic damage, but these things don’t happen very often,” he said. “But if we plan for it and put in the effort now, it will pay off and we can actually prevent a huge disaster in the future.”

This story first appeared on NBCNews.com.

This article was originally published on TODAY.com