JPL and the Space Age: The Hunt for Space Rocks

Published 2023-06-15
Asteroids and comets are among the oldest objects in our solar system. They mostly reside at safe distances from Earth, but some find their way into our planetary backyard.

Every day, the Earth receives visitors from outer space: tons of space debris that mostly goes unnoticed. Some of these “shooting stars,” however, do survive the fiery descent through the atmosphere. That’s what happened to the dinosaurs 65 million years ago when a massive asteroid – or comet – struck Earth. But as the saying goes: "The dinosaurs didn't have a space agency. Fortunately, we do."

“The Hunt for Space Rocks” chronicles JPLs pioneering work to understand asteroids and comets as part of NASA’s larger effort to protect our planet from cosmic marauders. From JPL’s effort to mount a mission to study the most famous comet of all – Halley’s comet – to the lab’s current role in planetary defense with its Center for Near Earth Object Studies (CNEOS). The documentary drives home a clear message: We need to find the asteroids and comets before they find us.

Documentary length: 1 hour 52 minutes

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This is the 16th episode in the documentary series “JPL and the Space Age,” which uses rare archival footage and interviews to help tell the story of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s trailblazing role in space exploration.

Watch all episodes of the “JPL and the Space Age” series:
* JPL’s Website – go.nasa.gov/30U6gTa
* JPL’s YouTube Channel –    • JPL and the Space Age  

All Comments (21)
  • @BrianGreeson
    JPL. Thank you for creating these documentaries and sharing them with us here. What an excellent way to highlight the numerous contributions JPL teams have made. Bravo!
  • @scrappydoo7887
    Such a fascinating subject. I'll never stop being spellbound by the limitless variety and possibilities that are out there all around us
  • AS space nerd, I love watching and learning ,more and more about this space. BIG THANKS.
  • @richardzeitz54
    This is an excellent production! As a person who grew up watching those old school NOVA documentaries on PBS, in the 1970s and 1980s, this production is exactly my speed. If you like information dense, clearly produced, no silly frills documentaries, this is for you. This is a what educational video should be - highly informative, well structured, dense. Wonderful!
  • @ajsalvlk
    Hands down best content created about asteroids and our current understanding and defence capability against its threats
  • @adityakrishna4101
    Amazing set of documentaries… lots to learn from… please keep sharing your experience in this format… I am sure there are masses of science enthusiasts who will one day or the other definitely be looking back to this! Love from India 🇮🇳
  • @cjh1142
    The narrator is the same guy that does the Mass Effect codex entries. It has to be. Incredible voice!
  • @user-iu2rt9eo4l
    Awesome documentary, thanks a lot. It was fascinating, and the work done by JPL is so important.
  • @davisgreen2099
    YouTube at it's very best!! This is very important science that can quite literally save all life on Earth!! Well done, JPL!!😮😊
  • A huge thank you and deepest respect to the men and women who made this possible, and dared to dream it was even possible in the first place. It's a joy to watch.
  • @Maxvellua
    Thank you so much for the documentaries you made! Amazing videos! JPL, you rock!
  • @mrstaemin7958
    I've absolutely loved watching these documentaries. I wish there was a soundtrack album!
  • @timohearn4454
    The DART mission certainly sits upon the shoulders of great scientists and engineers. Can't imagine that mission would be possible without prior work ans successes such as this. Such beautiful and wonderful work.
  • @kspencerian
    This has been a wonderful series, and this one had importance that comes literally close to home. You've done general videos on many Mars and outer planet trips. How about some love for Mariner 10, MESSENGER and the incoming BepiColombo--and why we've sent so few things there, and what missions might land something there. A Venus show would be naturally populated with Venera stuff, so perhaps a Mercury/Venus show? Thanks again.
  • @1974williamk
    I love that you two connected I’ve been following both your channels. Excellent content.
  • @michaelripley4528
    Great with a Long video from JPL!!!💙❤️ I like to lean back and enjoy💯
  • @rustymotor
    I am amazed how space research has progressed in my lifetime, I remember the Voyager missions and loved looking at the images when they were published and also the Mars Viking landers. I also remember at School a teacher said that Venus was most likely a cloud wrapped tropical water world inhabited by Lizard people floating on rafts, I was so disappointed when the Soviet Venera missions finally reached the surface and revealed the true state of venus, no Lizard people to visit. Anyway I hope to live long enough to see more exciting Space missions and maybe find life on one of Jupiters or Saturns moons!