[meteorite-list] Deep Impact and Stardust May Be Sent on Future Missions
From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Mar 16 18:08:38 2006 Message-ID: <200603161735.k2GHZCU09584_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov> http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/local/article/0,1299,DRMN_15_4545515,00.html Colorado craft could return to the stars Deep Impact and Stardust may be sent on future missions By Jim Erickson Rocky Mountain News March 16, 2006 LEAGUE CITY, Texas - Think of it as celestial recycling. Comet researchers are finalizing plans to send two highly successful Colorado-built NASA probes, Stardust and Deep Impact, on new, relatively low-cost missions to other icy mini-worlds. Both probes recently finished their main missions. They remain in orbit, fully operational and with plenty of fuel, awaiting orders. So what to do with them? Next month, at least two research teams will propose sending Stardust and Deep Impact on follow-up comet missions. A third group will suggest building a twin of Deep Impact - which was developed at Ball Aerospace & Technologies in Boulder - to execute another comet-busting project. If approved, the proposed missions would occur early in the next decade. "If you've got it, use it," said Tucson planetary scientist Michael Belton, a member of the Deep Impact science team and backer of the three proposals, called Scar Quest, Dixie and Deep R. "We certainly don't want to waste investments of hundreds of millions of dollars, especially when they're up there and ready to go," Belton said Wednesday at the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference outside Houston. The $212 million Stardust spacecraft was built in Jefferson County by Lockheed Martin Space Systems. It traveled seven years and nearly 3 billion miles to grab dust from Comet Wild 2, then returned it to Earth in a small capsule. The capsule parachuted onto the Utah salt flats Jan. 15. But the main Stardust spacecraft remains in orbit around the sun. NASA placed it in hibernation late last month, meaning that all but a few essential systems - including the solar arrays and the receiving antenna - were deactivated. Last July 4, the $333 million Ball-built Deep Impact spacecraft met up with Comet Tempel 1. The Deep Impact mother ship fired an 820-pound "bullet" into the dirty snowball. It threw up a cloud of debris that was photographed by the mother ship and by Earth-based telescopes. The copper-reinforced "impactor" vaporized on contact, but the mother ship remains fully functional and ready for another assignment. The proposed Scar Quest mission would send Stardust to Comet Tempel 1 for a second look. A main goal would be to find and photograph the crater blown open by Deep Impact. The collision ejected a cloud of talcum-fine dust and ice that obscured camera views of the bowl-shaped hole left behind. "We'd get the glimpse we never got with Deep Impact," said University of Arizona planetary scientist H. Jay Melosh, a member of the Deep Impact science team and a participant in the Scar Quest, Dixie and Deep R proposals. The Dixie mission would use the Deep Impact mother ship to fly past Comet Boethin and photograph it in detail. Deep R calls for the construction of a new Deep Impact spacecraft - both impactor and mother ship. It would be sent to Comet Churyumov-Gerasimenko, which is also the destination of the European Space Agency's Rosetta probe, launched in 2004. The idea is that both Deep R and Rosetta would be watching when another copper-reinforced bullet blasts into Churyumov-Gerasimenko. All three proposals, and many others, will be submitted to NASA next month. The concepts will compete to become the next in NASA's Discovery program of relatively low- cost, tightly focused science missions. Start-from-scratch Discovery missions have a cost cap of $425 million. Proposals to use existing spacecraft for new purposes are capped at $35 million. They are called Missions of Opportunity, or MOOs in NASA acronym-speak. Both Scar Quest (the scar refers to the crater excavated by Deep Impact) and Dixie fall into the second category. President Bush has proposed cutting $3 billion from NASA's space science budget over the next five years. But so far, the Discovery program has remained "relatively unscathed," said Michael New, the agency's program scientist for the Discovery missions. Received on Thu 16 Mar 2006 12:35:12 PM PST |
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