The Double Asteroid Redirect Test (DART) was NASA's successful test on September 26, 2022 of its plan to defend Earth from an asteroid's on collision course with our planet.
DART spacecraft zeroed in on Dimorphos, Didymos little moon which is 160 m in diameter and at a distance of 6.8 million miles or 11 million kilometers from Earth. It stroke the little asteroid at a speed of 14,000 miles per hour hoping to divert from its orbit.
A picture of the little asteroid Dimorphos taken 2 min before the impact shows in great detail rocks on its surface.
Images from James Webb telescope showed a vast cloud of dust indicating a much larger force of the impact that it was expected. The images were similar to those obtained by the Italian Space agency LICIAcube the little craft that separated from DART moments before its impact on Dimorphos. NASA announced on Oct 11, 2022 DART's mission proved successful in adjusting the trajectory of Dimorphos, suggesting that a deadly space rock could be deflected in the future. Before DART's impact it took the little asteroid 11 hours and 55 min to orbit its Didymos. The spacecraft's impact changed the smaller asteroid's orbit by 32 min.