It was once considered the most dangerous object in the universe,
heading for Earth with the explosive power of 84 Hiroshimas.
Now an asteroid called 2000SG344, a lump of rock barely the
size of a large yacht, is in the spotlight again, this time
as a contender for the next giant leap for mankind.
Nasa engineers have identified the 1.1m tonne asteroid, which
in 2000 was given a significant chance of slamming into Earth,
as a potential landing site for astronauts, ahead of the Bush
administration's plans to venture deeper into the solar system
with a crewed voyage to Mars.
The mission - the first to what officials call a Near Earth
Object (NEO) - is being floated within the US space agency
as a crucial stepping stone to future space exploration.
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A report seen by the Guardian notes that by sending astronauts
on a three-month journey to the hurtling asteroid, scientists
believe they would learn more about the psychological effects
of long-term missions and the risks of working in deep space,
and it would allow astronauts to test kits to convert subsurface
ice into drinking water, breathable oxygen and even hydrogen
to top up rocket fuel. All of which would be invaluable before
embarking on a two-year expedition to Mars.
Under the Bush administration, Nasa has been charged with
sending astronauts back to the moon, beginning in 2020 and
culminating in a permanent lunar outpost, itself a jumping
off point for more distant Mars missions. With the agency's
ageing fleet of space shuttles due to be retired soon after
2010, the agency has begun work on a replacement called Orion
and a series of Ares rockets that will blast them into orbit.
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