[meteorite-list] Deep Impact Flyby Spacecraft Ready For New Mission

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Jul 14 13:25:20 2005
Message-ID: <200507141724.j6EHOVS24938_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://space.com/missionlaunches/050714_flyby_future.html

Deep Impact Flyby Spacecraft Ready For New Mission
By Leonard David
space.com
14 July 2005

BOULDER, Colorado - Following its smashing success earlier this month
with comet Tempel 1, the Deep Impact Flyby spacecraft is being readied
for potential retargeting to yet another scientific destination.

The two-part Deep Impact craft consisted of the destroyed-on-purpose,
battery-powered Impactor probe that was literally run over by Tempel 1,
and a still-healthy Flyby spacecraft that monitored the event from a
safe distance.

"NASA has given us a tiny amount of funding to make a maneuver next week
that will set up the right trajectory and then enough money to keep the
spacecraft alive in safe mode," said Michael A'Hearn, an astronomer at
the University of Maryland in College Park, Maryland. He is the Deep
Impact mission's principal investigator.

"They have not approved the extended mission yet because they haven't
found the money," A'Hearn told SPACE.com, noting that comet 85P/Boethin
is the target for a hoped for new science objective.

This new object of desire, comet 85P/Boethin, was spotted in 1975 during
a comet-sweeping session carried out by the now deceased Reverend Leo
Boethin of the Philippines.

The comet experienced two close approaches to Jupiter during the 20th
century. It will make two close approaches to Earth and two close
approaches to Jupiter during the first half of the 21st century, based
on the orbital work of Japanese astronomer, Kazuo Kinoshita.

Healthy spacecraft

The dual-element Deep Impact spacecraft was designed and built here by
Ball Aerospace & Technologies Corporation.

NASA's $333 million Deep Impact mission is a Discovery-class project,
one of a pedigree of probes that achieve ground-breaking, highly-focused
science within strict cost and schedule limitations.

The encounter with Tempel 1 occurred nearly 83 million miles from Earth
and at closing speeds approaching 23,000 miles per hour. The Impactor on
July 4 at 1:52 a.m. EDT (0552 GMT) exhumed material from Tempel 1's
nucleus - the central portion of the head of a comet.

After imaging the encounter and sailing through the tail of the
departing comet in a protected shield mode, the Flyby spacecraft --
outfitted with science instruments and carrying a healthy reserve of
fuel -- continues to perform flawlessly.

Engineers did expect some damage to the Flyby spacecraft as a result of
sweeping through Tempel 1's coma and tail, but after exiting shield mode
and starting the look-back imagery, they discovered "no appreciable
damage," said Monte Henderson, Deputy Director of Programs in Civil
Space Systems for Ball Aerospace.

The spacecraft's optics has shown no sign of sandblasting, he told
SPACE.com, with the vehicle's high-gain antenna also in excellent shape.
Not a single solar cell on the solar arrays was lost, he added. "We
couldn't be happier."

Green light for maneuver

NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. has given Deep Impact project
leaders the green light to perform a maneuver later this month to bring
the spacecraft back to Earth in early 2008, said Donald Yeomans,
Supervisor of the Solar System Dynamics Group at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California.

Yeomans told SPACE.com that, presumably, the Deep Impact project would
have to obtain extended mission funds via a new - and successful -
Discovery proposal.

"Using an Earth swingby, the spacecraft could be re-targeted to comet
85P/Boethin in late 2008," Yeomans said. Cameras on-board the Flyby
spacecraft have shown their abilities to provide impressive imaging.
Additionally, the infrared spectrometer has also performed beautifully,
he said.

Scientists are delighted given the bang-up findings from the Deep Impact
earlier this month. In particular, experts can now compare and contrast
observations between several comets.

One minor concern

"To my mind, one of the key results of the Deep Impact mission is that
there are major differences between the nuclei of Halley, Borrelly, Wild
2 and Tempel 1," Yeomans noted. "Tempel 1, at least, does not seem to
conform to the 'fresh surface -- no impact craters -- crusted over dirty
iceball model' that seemed so popular prior to Deep Impact."

That being the case, Yeomans added, the more cometary nuclei that can be
studied at high resolution the better. "Comet Boethin is one of the most
accessible periodic comets for the Deep Impact spacecraft and with the
shortest flight time," he said.

But there is one minor concern about Boethin, Yeoman explained. It has
only been seen in 1975 and 1986. It was missed at its 1997 return to the
Sun, he said, because it was on the other side of the Sun from Earth at
the time.

"I'd be a bit more comfortable if one of our large aperture telescopes
could recover the comet this year or next - prior to its return to
perihelion [closest approach to the Sun] in 2008," Yeomans concluded.
Received on Thu 14 Jul 2005 01:24:31 PM PDT


Help support this free mailing list:



StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
reddit
Yahoo MyWeb