ExLabs plans landers on asteroid Apophis during 2029 Earth flyby

US company ExLabs announced that its ApophisExL mothership passed a key review ahead of a 2028 launch to rendezvous with asteroid Apophis. The spacecraft will deploy two landers as part of multiple missions studying the asteroid during its close pass by Earth on 13 April 2029. Apophis, 400 metres across, will come within 32,000 kilometres, visible to the naked eye.

Asteroid Apophis, discovered in 2004 and measuring about 400 metres across, once prompted concerns with initial calculations suggesting a 2.7 per cent chance of Earth impact in April 2029. Refined data confirmed no collision risk for at least 100 years, but the asteroid's flyby on 13 April 2029 will bring it just 32,000 kilometres from Earth—closer than geostationary satellites and observable without telescopes, a rare event for an object this size. Missions from the US, Europe, Japan, and China aim to examine it before, during, and after the pass. ExLabs, a private US firm, revealed that its ApophisExL mothership advanced through a critical review phase for a 2028 launch. The vehicle will transport up to 10 payloads, including two landers: one from an unnamed partner and a shoebox-sized model from Japan’s Chiba Institute of Technology. > “The goal is to gain images from the surface of the asteroid,” says Miguel Pascual, ExLabs chief science officer and co-founder. “There’s some really exciting science that can happen.” The Chiba lander deploys from 400 metres above the surface, descending at 10 centimetres per second to touch down after about an hour, capturing images. Deployment occurs up to a week post-flyby to avoid trajectory alterations amplified by Earth's gravity, per Pascual. The European-Japanese Ramses mission plans a pre-flyby landing with a seismometer to detect gravitational-induced landslides and potentially observe other landers. > “Any opportunity to touch and feel the softness or hardness of the surface is great,” says Patrick Michel of Côte d’Azur University, Ramses project scientist. “It is important that we coordinate. The world will be watching. We don’t want to screw up.” No private company has previously landed on an asteroid.

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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announces delay of first human moon landing to Artemis IV in 2028 during press conference.
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NASA delays moon landing to Artemis IV in 2028

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NASA has overhauled its Artemis program, postponing the first human moon landing until the Artemis IV mission in early 2028. The changes, announced by Administrator Jared Isaacman on February 27, 2026, aim to increase launch frequency and reduce risks after repeated delays with the Space Launch System rocket. An additional test flight, now Artemis III, will focus on low-Earth orbit rendezvous with commercial lunar landers.

NASA has rescheduled the Artemis II mission, the first crewed trip to the moon since 1972, for an April liftoff from Florida. The 10-day flight will carry four astronauts on a lunar flyby without landing, testing key systems for future missions. Commander Reid Wiseman leads the crew, which includes the first Canadian astronaut to venture to the moon.

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NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is set to launch Artemis II as soon as April 1, 2026, sending four astronauts on a crewed flyby to the Moon's far side—the farthest from Earth any humans have traveled. This follows February's Artemis program adjustments addressing SLS delays, using the rocket's powerful core stage and boosters detailed ahead of liftoff.

NASA's Van Allen Probe A satellite, launched in 2012 to study Earth's radiation belts, is set to reenter the atmosphere early this week after running out of fuel in 2019. The agency has approved a safety waiver due to the reentry's risk exceeding government standards, though the chance of harm remains low at 1 in 4,200. Most of the 1,323-pound spacecraft will burn up, with some debris potentially reaching the surface.

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New research shows that Nasa's Dart spacecraft, which crashed into the asteroid moonlet Dimorphos in 2022, has changed the orbit of the binary asteroid system around the sun. This marks the first time a human-made object has measurably altered a celestial body's path in this way. The findings highlight potential methods for planetary defense against hazardous space objects.

Researchers at the University of Arizona simulated the formation of a large crater on metal-rich asteroid 16 Psyche to predict its internal structure ahead of NASA's arriving spacecraft. The study highlights the role of porosity in crater shapes and tests two possible compositions: a layered metallic core with rocky mantle or a uniform metal-silicate mix. Findings, published in JGR Planets, will aid interpretation of mission data expected in 2029.

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NASA has set March 6 as the earliest possible launch date for the Artemis II mission following a successful second fueling test of its Space Launch System rocket. The test at Kennedy Space Center resolved issues from an earlier attempt marred by a hydrogen leak. The mission will send four astronauts around the Moon in a crewed test of the Orion spacecraft.

 

 

 

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