Thunderous momentum: what to watch in 2026
2026 is the Year of the Fire Horse (丙午 / hinoe‑uma), a zodiac sign associated with thunderous momentum. At the JAXA Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, the pounding of each of the fire horse’s hooves mark out four major mission events scheduled for 2026.

Hoof 1: The flyby of asteroid Torifune
Just over five years ago, a spacecraft was on a collision course with Earth. At 220,000 km from the planet, a capsule detached from the main body and descended into the atmosphere. In the control room at the JAXA Sagamihara Campus, the final command of the Hayabusa2 mission was issued to the spacecraft: Escape.
The capsule landed in South Australia, carrying a sample collected from asteroid Ryugu. In response to the command from Earth, the Hayabusa2 spacecraft made a precise trajectory change with three thruster firings, diverting from the collision course to slide past the planet and return to deep space. A new mission had begun.
This extended mission became Hayabusa2#, with the “#” standing for SHARP: Small Hazardous Asteroid Reconnaissance Probe. The mission plan is to visit two new asteroids, and use these encounters to gather information that could help protect our planet from a possible future asteroid impact.
Hayabusa2# is on schedule to meet the first of these asteroids on July 5, 2026.
The asteroid is (98943) Torifune, a name taken from the mythological ship of the gods in Japan folklore that is renowned for travelling safely at high speeds. The name reflects the objective of the mission: to observe Torifune during a high-speed flyby.
A flyby is a single-chance event. Hayabusa2 will pass Torifune at a relative speed of approximately 5 km/s, allowing only brief moments to capture images during the closest approach. This presents a particular challenge because the cameras onboard Hayabusa2 were designed for detailed observations during long-duration rendezvous operations at close range. To obtain high-quality images of Torifune, Hayabusa2 must therefore approach the asteroid as closely as possible during the high-speed encounter, requiring exceptionally precise navigation. While Hayabusa2 had been safely guided past Earth, this high-precision manoeuvre must have an accuracy equivalent to intentionally impacting an asteroid if it was ever required to deflect an incoming small body away from our planet.
If we succeed in performing an extremely close flyby of Torifune, we will not only collect valuable data on a new asteroid but also flex the skills needed to one day protect the planet.

Hoof 2: The impact site
Asteroid deflection was tested for the first time on 22 September 2022. A nail-biting sequence of images transmitted by the NASA DART spacecraft showed the surface of asteroid Dimorphos expanding to fill the camera view before the final image bled an eerie red.
Dimorphos is part of a binary asteroid system, and the collision created a change in the mutual orbit of the two asteroids that was measurable from Earth. But although DART had successfully altered the trajectory of Dimorphos, there had been no time to study the asteroids before the impact destroyed the spacecraft. With the properties of the asteroid and conditions at the impact site unknown, the full effect of the collision remains a mystery and prevents reliably predicting how a similar impact would affect another asteroid.
The solution was the Hera mission. Launched by the European Space Agency (ESA), Hera is scheduled to arrive at the binary asteroid around November 2026. The spacecraft will examine Dimorphos and the impact site to learn more about the outcome of kinetic impacts.
Hera carries the Thermal InfraRed Imager (TIRI) developed at JAXA. The instrument is the successor to the thermal camera onboard Hayabusa2 which revealed the highly porous nature of the asteroid Ryugu’s surface material. TIRI will perform similar work onboard Hera, measuring how quickly the rocks of Dimorphos heat and cool, as well as analysing the different wavelengths of emitted infrared radiation. This will help determine the asteroid’s structure and composition.
TIRI had a test run last year, when the Hera spacecraft flew past Mars, and captured images of Mars and its outermost moon, Deimos. The huge Martian crater, Hellas Planitia, appeared as a cold region on the thermal image of the Martian surface. However, this was a fleeting flyby of the Martian system. Another mission is about to take a much closer look.

Hoof 3: The launch to Phobos
Despite being discovered almost 150 years ago, no dedicated mission has ever visited the moons of Mars. This is set to change in FY 2026, when the Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) mission launches from Japan’s Tanegashima Space Centre. The goal is to observe both Phobos and Deimos, with a particular focus on Phobos, from which the spacecraft will collect and return the first material ever retrieved from the Mars system.
The origin of the two Martian moons is heavily debated (📺). One theory suggests that these are captured asteroids, snagged by Mars’s gravity after being scattered inwards from the outer Solar System. An alternative view is that the pair are the product of a giant impact with Mars which tossed debris into orbit that coalesced into the two moons. Both scenarios pack the moons with information about the evolution of the Mars system and the development of a habitable environment. For those on #TeamCapture, the moons are evidence of types of material that were transported from the icy outer Solar System, and which may have seeded habitability with water and organics. Meanwhile, #TeamImpact expect the moons to be time capsules for a chunk of early Mars during an epoch when Mars might have been habitable.
The scientific instruments onboard MMX and the returned samples should reveal the origin of the two moons, and dig deeper into the past of both Mars and our own habitable world.
MMX is led by JAXA but equipped with instruments and ground support from NASA, CNES (France), DLR (Germany), ESA, and ASA (Australia). These contributions include the MMX rover, IDEFIX, which will land on Phobos ahead of the spacecraft to explore the moon’s surface for the first time. The sample capsule with the material collected from Phobos is planned to land in Australia.
MMX is scheduled to reach the Mars sphere in FY 2027, collect samples and study the moons until FY 2030, before returning to Earth in FY 2031.

Hoof 4: Mercury rising
“Cinq… Quatre… Trois… Deux… Un… Top!”
The rocket ignited and lifted into the sky above the Guiana Space Centre. On JAXA’s live feed from Kourou, the final word rang out: sayounara!
In October 2018, BepiColombo begun the long voyage to Mercury. A fittingly hot conclusion to the Year of the Fire Horse will be the spacecraft’s arrival at our innermost planet.
BepiColombo is a joint mission between ESA and JAXA, whose two orbiters are currently stacked together to form the BepiColombo spacecraft. The JAXA orbiter, Mio, will explore Mercury’s magnetic field and surrounding environment which is pummelled by the solar wind and radiation. The ESA orbiter, MPO, will focus on studying Mercury’s surface.
The journey to Mercury has been a long eight years. The Sun’s massive gravitational pull makes it extremely difficult for a spacecraft to hit the perfect velocity needed to enter into orbit around Mercury. BepiColombo therefore had to complete nine planetary swingbys that used the gravity of Earth, Venus and of Mercury itself to break against the Sun’s inexhaustible force.
But the time has come to study Mercury in detail. The two orbiters will separate and enter into orbit around Mercury in December 2026.

The intensive progress anticipated by the Year of the Fire Horse usually runs with a warning: do not run too fast too quickly as you may burn out. This is the year of incredible events in space: remember to take care of yourself so you can enjoy each one with us.
Further information:
Flyby of asteroid Torifune on July 5, 2026
The Hayabusa2# Extended Mission
Hera: Binary Asteroid System Exploration (JAXA site)
Hera spacecraft completes a Mars swing-by
The Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) Mission
BepiColombo Mio Orbiter
1 Earth, 2 Venus, 6 Mercury: the route of BepiColombo to reach Mercury
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