Earths 1st Asteroid Mining Prospector Heads to the Launchpad

A private company is aiming to heave a microwave oven-size spacecraft toward an asteroid later this week, its goal to kick off a future where precious metals are mined around the solar system to create vast fortunes on Earth.“If this works out, this will probably be the biggest business ever conceived of,” said Matt Gialich, the founder and chief executive of AstroForge, the builder and operator of the robotic probe.That may sound familiar: A decade ago, news stories were aflutter about the wealth promised by asteroid mining companies.But things didn’t quite work out.“We blossomed three or four years too early for the big gold rush of investor enthusiasm for space projects,” said David Gump, the former chief executive of Deep Space Industries, one of the earlier batch of would-be asteroid miners.

Eventually the money dried up; Deep Space Industries was sold off in 2019 and never reached an asteroid.AstroForge is betting on things being different this time around.The California company has already launched a demonstration spacecraft into Earth orbit and raised $55 million in funding.

Now the company is set to actually travel toward a near-Earth asteroid in deep space.AstroForge’s second robotic spacecraft, called Odin, is bundled into a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that will also launch a privately built moon lander and a NASA-operated lunar orbiter as soon as Wednesday from Florida.About 45 minutes after the launch, Odin will separate and begin its solo journey into deep space, while the moon missions — the Athena lander from Intuitive Machines and NASA’s Lunar Trailblazer — take off on their own separate journeys.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

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Publisher: The New York Times

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