The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft fired its Trajectory Correction Maneuver (TCM) thrusters for the first time last week in order to slightly adjust its trajectory on the outbound journey from Earth to Bennu.
The mission will travel for two years on a journey to Bennu, a near-Earth asteroid about the size of a small mountain.
The spacecraft's main goal is to gather dirt and debris from the surface of the asteroid and return it to Earth by 2023 for further study.
The spacecraft's planned first Trajectory Correction Manoeuvre (TCM-1) lasted for about 12 seconds. The manoeuvre changed the velocity of the spacecraft by 50 centimetres per second and used about 0.5 kilogramme of fuel.
The spacecraft is currently about 14.5 million kilometres from Earth.
TCM-1 was originally included in the spacecraft's flight plan to fine-tune its trajectory if needed after the mission's launch last month.
The launch performance was so accurate, however, that the spacecraft's orbit had no practical need for correction.
Instead, the OSIRIS-REx mission team used the manoeuvre to test the TCM thrusters and as practice to prepare for a much larger propulsive manoeuvre scheduled in December.
The unused propellant from this event provides more fuel margin for the spacecraft's asteroid proximity operations once OSIRIS-REx arrives at Bennu.
To track the manoeuvre, the OSIRIS-REx mission's navigation team monitored the Doppler shift in radio signals between the spacecraft and the Deep Space Network antenna at the Goldstone Observatory in California.
After 44 seconds - the current one-way light time delay between the spacecraft and Earth - the team received the first manoeuvre data from the spacecraft.
The OSIRIS-REx spacecraft has four different kinds of thrusters providing considerable redundancy in its ability to manoeuvre on its way to the surface of Bennu and back.
OSIRIS-REx began using its Attitude Control System (ACS) thrusters shortly after launch to keep the spacecraft oriented, so that its solar arrays point towards the Sun and its communication antennas point towards Earth.
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