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It's official: NASA spacecraft is orbiting giant asteroid

An unmanned NASA probe made history 117 million miles from Earth on Saturday when it arrived at the huge asteroid Vesta, making it the first spacecraft ever to orbit an object in the solar system's asteroid belt.
Image: Vesta
NASA's Dawn spacecraft obtained this image of the asteroid Vesta on July 9, from a distance of about 26,000 miles (41,000 kilometers).NASA / JPL-Caltech / UCLA / MPS / DLR / IDA
/ Source: Space.com

An unmanned NASA probe made history 117 million miles from Earth on Saturday when it arrived at the huge asteroid Vesta, making it the first spacecraft ever to orbit an object in the solar system's asteroid belt.

The Dawn spacecraft entered orbit around Vesta after a four-year chase and will spend about a year studying the huge space rock before moving on to visit another asteroid called Ceres.

Vesta is a huge asteroid about as wide as U.S. state of Arizona, and is also the brightest asteroid in the solar system. It is located in the asteroid belt, a band of rocky objects that encircles the sun between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. [Photos: Asteroid Vesta and NASA's Dawn Probe]

"Today, we celebrate an incredible exploration milestone as a spacecraft enters orbit around an object in the main asteroid belt for the first time," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said in a statement. "Dawn's study of the asteroid Vesta marks a major scientific accomplishment and also points the way to the future destinations where people will travel in the coming years. President Obama has directed NASA to send astronauts to an asteroid by 2025, and Dawn is gathering crucial data that will inform that mission."  

Biggest asteroids up close
NASA launched the $466 million Dawn mission in 2007 to explore the largest asteroids in the asteroid belt. Vesta is 330 miles (530 kilometers) wide, large enough that some astronomers consider it to be a protoplanet. Astronomers do not understand why the asteroid is so bright and hope Dawn will answer that and other mysteries of Vesta.

After studying Vesta in unprecedented detail, the Dawn probe is expected fire up its ion propulsion system to leave orbit and head to the largest asteroid in the solar system, the dwarf planet Ceres. Ceres is about 590 miles (950 kilometers) wide. Dawn will arrive at this target in 2015, NASA officials said. [7 Strangest Asteroids in the Solar System]

Since its launch, Dawn has covered more than 1.7 billion miles (2.7 billion kilometers).

Late Saturday, the spacecraft beamed a message to Earth to alert its controllers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., that it had begun orbiting Vesta. But the exact time of the probe's asteroid arrival is not yet known, NASA officials said. Mission managers initially estimated that the time of arrival would be at about 10 p.m. PT Friday (1 a.m. ET Saturday).

"The time of Dawn's capture depended on Vesta's mass and gravity, which only has been estimated until now," mission managers said in a statement. "The asteroid's mass determines the strength of its gravitational pull. "

The more massive Vesta is, the stronger its gravity will be, meaning Dawn would have been pulled into orbit earlier. If the asteroid is less massive, the gravitational pull would be weaker, and Dawn would have taken longer to reach orbit.

Missions to asteroid
But arrival time aside, the Dawn probe is most assuredly blazing a new trail in space, NASA officials said.

While past missions by NASA and other space agencies have sent spacecraft to visit asteroids, none of those targets were in the main asteroid belt.

Image: Dawn, Vesta and Ceres
An artist's conception shows NASA's Dawn spacecraft, propelled by an ion drive, and its two targets: the asteroid Vesta on the left, and the dwarf planet Ceres on the right.

In 2000, a NASA probe called Near-Earth Asteroid Rendezvous Shoemaker (or NEAR Shoemaker) went into orbit around the asteroid Eros and landed on the space rock at the end of its mission. Japan's Hayabusa mission sent a probe that collected samples from the asteroid Itokawa and brought them back to Earth last year. The orbits of Eros as well as Itokawa range outside the main belt.

Dawn's mission was first approved by NASA in 2001, a year after the NEAR Shoemaker arrival at Eros. But budget issues prompted NASA to cancel the mission in March 2006, which sparked an outcry from researchers. NASA reinstated the mission just weeks after its cancellation.

NASA is now planning a new asteroid mission called Osiris-Rex, which is set to launch a spacecraft to a near-Earth asteroid in 2016 and collect samples from the space rock in 2020. That mission is expected to return any samples it collects to Earth in 2023.

You can follow Space.com Managing Editor Tariq Malik on Twitter: @tariqjmalik. Follow Space.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter and on .