Watch Japan's Hayabusa spacecraft shoot a bullet at an asteroid Thursday
JAXA is finally ready to collect a sample of the asteroid Ryugu. And you can watch it happen live.

Japanese spacecraft Hayabusa 2 will try to bring a bit of Ryugu back to Earth.
Let's fire a bullet at an asteroid. This might sound like a plot point from a sci-fi show, but it's about to become reality when Japan's space agency JAXA directs its Hayabusa 2 spacecraft to go grab a sample of an asteroid.
Hayabusa 2 arrived at the asteroid Ryugu in mid-2018 and has already delivered two rovers and a lander to the surface. But touching down on the rock with its sampler horn is a sensitive operation.
JAXA delayed the touchdown from last fall after discovering Ryugu's surface was much rockier than expected. The new sample collection time is set for Friday, Feb. 22 at 8 a.m. Japan time, which works out to Thursday, Feb. 21 at 3 p.m. Pacific in the US.
Touchdown #haya2_TD is planned for Feb 22 ~8am JST! We will have a live web broadcast from the control room (link coming soon) with English translation.
— HAYABUSA2@JAXA (@haya2e_jaxa) February 18, 2019
Have questions? Ask us at the #haya2_QA hashtag! (Early is fine.)
(Please forgive us if we cannot get to all your questions.)
JAXA will broadcast live online from its control room with an English translation available.
The spacecraft's cylindrical sampler horn is designed to touch the asteroid's surface, fire a bullet into the rock and then gather up the fragments ejected by the impact.
The Hayabusa 2 team conducted an experiment on Earth to see if the sampler is likely to work with Ryugu's gravelly surface. The test involved firing a projectile into a simulated surface made to mimic the asteroid. According to the results, the spacecraft's system should work just fine.
The surface of Ryugu was not what we expected. So our sampler team had to conduct an experiment to check we could still gather material from the asteroid surface when we attempt #haya2_TD touchdown this Friday! https://t.co/bCzvW2gwSr pic.twitter.com/XxJXETKB6N
— HAYABUSA2@JAXA (@haya2e_jaxa) February 18, 2019
The touchdown is still a daring operation. The spacecraft will have to avoid boulders, but still get close enough to reach the surface. If all goes well, Hayabusa 2 will return to Earth in late 2020 with a bit of asteroid on board for scientists to study.