Enabling tomorrow's planetary defence and space resource economy: Autonomous fleet-based asteroid rendezvous missions
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Asteroids preserve the solar system's earliest history and pose real threats to Earth. Strengthening the UK's capabilities to detect, track, and characterise Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) is vital for national security, world-leading planetary science, and future space resource opportunities. The UK has been an influential contributor to planetary defence, from establishing the UK NEO Task Force in 2000 to active roles in the International Asteroid Warning Network (IAWN), the Space Mission Planning Advisory Group (SMPAG), and the development of the National Space Operations Centre (NSpOC). UK scientists contribute to major international asteroid missions including NASA's OSIRIS-REx, DART, Lucy, and Psyche; ESA's Hera and RAMSES; and JAXA's Hayabusa2 and MMX. However, the UK currently lacks dedicated funding streams to deliver asteroid missions. Ground-based observations of asteroids cannot definitively determine the physical characteristics of these objects, which are crucial for impact-risk assessment, deflection strategy, and resource evaluation. This white paper proposes UK leadership in autonomous, low-cost asteroid-rendezvous missions, leveraging technologies developed through the UKRI-funded REMORA programme. We outline four priorities: (1) strengthen NEO detection capabilities; (2) reinforce UK participation in international planetary defence missions; (3) develop autonomous rendezvous and in-situ characterisation technologies; and (4) enable the future space resource economy through targeted asteroid exploration. Together, these actions position the UK to lead rapid, affordable deep-space missions and secure a long-term strategic advantage.
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