The launch of the SPHEREx spectrometry mission and PUNCH heliospheric mission, on a single rocket, was successful. All four PUNCHes and SPHEREx deployed from the second stage. SPHEREx, for one, has successfully communicated with the ground; the PUNCH team has not mentioned anything I can see.
SPHEREx, assuming everything aboard survived and checks out, will scan the sky at moderate spectral resolution. In particular, it will view any asteroids and comets that happen to cross its field of view. The craft will take spectra from visible out to 5 microns, containing key spectral features present at asteroids and comets. This includes not only the minerals olivine and pyroxene, but water, ammonium compounds, organics, etc.
PUNCH will scan the solar corona and nearby space, four ways. In the course of monitoring the solar vicinity, the mission will catch sungrazing comets and asteroids. We currently check SoHO and STEREO images for such small bodies, and the occasional lucky alignment from SolO. The nature of these low-perihelion bodies is vague and speculative; better monitoring may constrain just which compounds these bodies are made of, and are losing to space.