Deep Impact -
Why copper? Because copper doesn’t interfere with spectral analysis of the debris. They didn’t want to confuse comet material with spacecraft material. Elegant.
On July 4, 2005—yes, American Independence Day—the impactor hit. The timing was deliberate. NASA joked they were giving the comet “the fireworks it deserved.” When the impactor struck, scientists expected a nice, clean crater. Instead, the comet erupted like a shaken soda can. A massive plume of ice, dust, and organic compounds shot out, and the comet brightened five times over. The crater ended up being far larger than expected (150 meters wide), and the impact released energy equivalent to 4.5 tons of TNT. Deep Impact
But the real shock came from the data. Tempel 1 was not a frozen ice ball. It was a fluffy, porous “rubble pile” held together by weak gravity and static electricity. Its surface was covered in fine, powdery dust—like freshly fallen snow, but dirtier. And it smelled (via spectrography) of rotten eggs (hydrogen sulfide), cat urine (ammonia), and formaldehyde. Charming. Here’s the part most reports leave out: Deep Impact did change the comet’s orbit—just barely. The impact altered Tempel 1’s velocity by about 0.0001 mm/s. That’s unimaginably tiny, but measurable. For the first time in history, humans altered the trajectory of a natural celestial body. Why copper
So the next time you watch Deep Impact (the movie) and see the astronauts say goodbye to their families before flying into a comet, remember: the real Deep Impact mission didn’t need heroes. It needed engineers, a copper washing machine, and a little bit of cosmic aim. Elegant