Trying to give an overview of missions to Asteroids & comets …
Giotto
( 2 July 1985 to comet HALLEY in 1986 and to comet Grigg-Skjellerup in 1992 )
NEAR Shoemaeker
( 17 February 1996 to asteroid 433 Eros in February 2001 )
Deep Space 1
( 15 October 1998 to comet BORELLY in September 2001 )
StarDust
( 07 February 1999 to comet WILD-2 in January 2004 )
Contour
( July 2002 to comet ENCKE … mission failure )
Deep Impact
( 12 January 2005 to comet TEMPLE-1 in July 2005 )
Which missions did I forget ?
… … …
'Five spacecraft were sent to examine Halley’s Comet at its return in 1985: two Japanese (Suisei and Sakigake), two Russian (Vegas 1 and 2) and one European (Giotto). Giotto was launched 2 July 1985 and actually passed through the comet’s head, within 335 miles of the velvet black nucleus, obtaining 2,112 close-range images of it, until the probe was jolted by hitting a rice-grain sized dust particle. It revealed that the nucleus was an irregular lumpy potato-shaped object, 9.3 miles in length, and had a rotation period of 53 hours, with a 7.3-day rotational period around this axis. Its temperature on the side nearest the Sun was 47°C.
http://infoman16.tripod.com/Articles/halley.htm
Doug
Galileo to Gaspra and Ida, NEAR to Mathilde, DS1 to Braille, Stardust to AnneFrank.
Phil
ICE to Comet Giacobini-Zinner, 1985.
Er... ...Hayabusa, anyone?
D'oh!
Bob Shaw
D'oh is right!
Could add Cassini's distant obs of Masursky as he zipped by on his way to wherever.
Phil
Does the manned mission of Challenger 2 (which looked an awful lot like Skylab) to a giant planetoid named Orpheus that was then hit by a comet in the 1979 film Meteor count?
http://www.filmsite.org/filmdisasters4.html
I suppose I could also add the Orion-type craft mission from Deep Impact, but I refuse on principle to all things decent to even mention Armageddon.
I don't suppose you'd care to count all the missions that at least peripherally looked at Phobos & Deimos?...
Here's my list (which is currently posted http://www.planetary.org/explore/topics/asteroids_and_comets/missions.html):
International Cometary Explorer (ICE) [Formerly Known as International Sun-Earth Explorer (ISEE-3)], Comet Giacobini-Zinner flyby and distant Halley observer (NASA)
Launch: August 12, 1978. Flyby: September 11, 1985
Vega 1 and Vega 2, Comet 1P/Halley flybys (Soviet Academy of Sciences)
Launch: December 15 and 21, 1984. Flyby: March 6 and 9, 1986
Sakigake, Comet 1P/Halley flyby (Institute of Space and Aeronautical Science (ISAS))
Launch: January 8,1985. Flyby: March 11, 1986
Suisei, Comet 1P/Halley flyby (Institute of Space and Aeronautical Science (ISAS))
Launch: March 18, 1985. Flyby: March 8, 1986
Giotto, Comets 1P/Halley and 26P/Grigg-Skjellerup flyby (ESA)
Launch: July 2, 1985. Halley flyby: March 13, 1986. Grigg-Skjellerup flyby: July 10, 1992
Galileo, Flyby of asteroids 951 Gaspra and 243 Ida; Jupiter orbiter (NASA)
Launch: October 18, 1989. Gaspra flyby: October 29, 1991. Ida/Dactyl flyby: August 28, 1993. Witnessed Shoemaker-Levy crash: July 1994
Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR), Asteroid 433 Eros orbiter (eventually used as a lander!) (NASA)
Launch: February 17, 1996. Eros arrival: February 14, 2000. Eros landing: February 12, 2001
Deep Space 1, Flybys of asteroid 9969 Braille and comet 19P/Borrelly (NASA)
Launch: October 24, 1998. Braille flyby: July 28, 1999. Borrelly flyby: September 22, 2001
Stardust, Flyby and coma sample return from comet P/Wild 2
Launch: February 7, 1999. Wild 2 flyby: January 2, 2004. Sample return: January 15, 2006
Comet Nucleus Tour (CONTOUR), Failed multi-comet flyby (NASA)
Launch: July 3, 2002. Lost August 15, 2002
Deep Impact, Flyby and impact into comet 9P/Tempel 1
Launch: January 12, 2005. Tempel 1 impact and flyby: July 4, 2005
Hayabusa (MUSES-C), Orbiter and sample return from asteroid Itokawa (1998 SF36) (ISAS)
Launch: May 9, 2003. Itokawa arrival: September 2005
Rosetta, Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko orbiter and lander (ESA)
Launch: March 2, 2004. Churyumov-Gerasimenko arrival: 2014
Dawn, Planned 4 Vesta and 1 Ceres orbiter (NASA)
Launch: planned for May 27, 2006 (suspended indefinitely)
Looks like my list is missing NEAR at Mathilde and Cassini at Masursky (and I've got to update the Hayabusa info on the page). I'll wait for this thread to develop a bit and then get to work Do you all think that the Ulysses comet tail encounters "count"?
--Emily
Soviet scientists considered an option to send the VEGA probes to other
celestial objects after Venus and Halley in 1986. One prime target was the
near-Earth planetoid 2101 Adonis, which VEGA 2 could pass at a distance
of six million kilometers (3.6 million miles).
Sadly, the Soviets had to back out on the opportunity to become the first
nation to fly a spacecraft past a planetoid when it was discovered that there
was not enough maneuvering fuel in the probe to reach Adonis as planned.
VEGA 1 and 2 were quietly shut down in early 1987.
Information from:
Robertson, Donald F., "Venus - A Prime Soviet Objective" (Parts 1/2), SPACEFLIGHT, Volume 34, Numbers 5/6, British Interplanetary
Society (BIS), London, England, May/June 1992
Considering how relatively poor the images of Halley were from the VEGAs, I have to wonder how much could have been seen and learned if they did do that flyby of Adonis?
Is there anything of interest about Adonis that might warrant a future mission to that worldlet? Besides its being an NEO?
Phil, take a look at my compilation.
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=1436 - All Visited Asteroids At A Glance!
Emily & Nico
Thanks for pointing those links out !
How about 'dedicated close encounters' and 'distant encounters of opportunity'?
Doug
Earth flew through the tail of Comet Halley in 1910. And since our planet has often been called Spaceship Earth....
But the earth is hardly 'unmanned'
Doug
Five years ago on February 12, 2001, the NEAR-Shoemaker probe became
not only the first one to orbit a planetoid (Eros), it also landed on the big ol'
rock:
http://near.jhuapl.edu/
And to think it was a Valentine's Day gift, too.
Radioisotope Electric Propulsion: Enabling the Decadal Survey Science
Goals for Primitive Bodies
STAIF, February 12-16, 2006
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/opag/mcnuttstaif06.pdf
I cannot found better topic than this one so I apologize for reanimation of this old topic.
Here is my collage of all cometary nuclei imaged by spacecrafts and planetary radars at 25 m/pix.
Now it's with C/2013 A1 Siding Spring.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/109586958@N03/15587641435/
machi, by your topic re-ignition you help to keep this wonderful resource that is UMSF concise.. yet.. wonderfully detailed...
Thanks for posting...
https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-space-launch-system-s-first-flight-to-send-small-sci-tech-satellites-into-space
NEA Scout has been approved to piggyback on SLS, along with 12(!) other cubesats, four for the Moon, the rest for deep space, and three others from international partners, yet to be announced.
The target is 1991 VG, which might actually be an artificial object from the 60s or 70s...
Day of decision is coming! "During http://www.esa.int/About_Us/Ministerial_Council_2016, December 1-2, 2016, the decision will be made whether or not to fund the http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Engineering_Technology/Asteroid_Impact_Mission, a collaborative effort with the international https://www.nasa.gov/planetarydefense/aida. To reinforce the importance of the AIM mission within the scientific and space communities, asteroid experts Patrick Michel, Alan Fitzsimmons and Debbie Lewis drafted a letter in support of AIM [...] published https://isupportaim.com/letter for the public to sign."
"Insiders say [AIM] missed their target sum by perhaps a few tens of millions. “A cool project has been killed because of a lack of vision, even short term, and courage, and this is really sad,” says Patrick Michel, a planetary scientist at the French National Centre for Scientific Research in Nice, who leads AIM. ..." http://www.nature.com/news/europe-s-first-mars-rover-gets-funding-despite-crash-of-test-craft-1.21091
Darn, so close! Hopefully the DART component will be approved in March. Even a clone of the Deep Impact mission is better than nothing....
Wörner said a few days ago (9 Dec) that he is trying to rescue the AIM mission, though how realistic that is, I have no idea.
there was an article about AIM in this week's "the Space Review"
http://www.thespacereview.com/article/3124/1
Looks like DART is still going ahead (preliminary design phase now): https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nasa-s-first-asteroid-deflection-mission-enters-next-design-phase
I've seen no news on AIM though; no getting our hopes up?
last I heard, ESA was studying an AIMlight mission, costing no more than 150 million euros
main-belt asteroids resolved by the VLT telescope. jaw-dropping!
https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw1749a/
AIM is now called http://www.scitecheuropa.eu/double-asteroid-redirection-test/84655/.
A very detailed summary, but note a slight error in the size of Didymos: 780 metres, not kilometres!
New animation of the current mission plan for Hera: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uIKpSKZ5HAs
Overall similar to AIM except obviously arrival is along after the DART impact. Pity the original plan for dual operations fell through!
More info on the renamed HERA mission from ESA (includes two proposed cubesats!): http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Engineering_Technology/Hera/CubeSats_joining_Hera_mission_to_asteroid_system
Final decision on development at the end of 2019.
More on the DART mission is on this NASA page - launch should be in about 2 years: https://www.nasa.gov/planetarydefense/dart,
and on this APL page with an upcoming April 2019 planning meeting: http://dart.jhuapl.edu/
Comet Interceptor is a mission proposal on a shortlist of six for ESA's F-class mission call. The mission would target a dynamically new comet from the Oort Cloud, or an interstellar object. ESA is expected to select the F-class mission in July 2019. Launch would be with ESA's Ariel exoplanet observatory in 2028.
Comet Interceptor would wait at Sun-Earth L2 until a suitable target is found inbound by survey observatories such as https://www.lsst.org/. The primary spacecraft would deploy subspacecraft for the comet encounter, providing multi-point in situ measurements of the environment near the comet, as well as different remote sensing viewpoints of the nucleus and coma.
The mission's website is here, where the team are inviting registration of support for the proposal:
http://www.cometinterceptor.space
The Twitter handle is https://twitter.com/cometintercept
some amazing high-resolution images of (7) Iris taken by the VLT in this paper:
https://arxiv.org/abs/1902.09242
From Space.com a new mission possibility: Centaurs Rising: NASA Eyes Missions to Weird Asteroid-Comet Hybrids: https://www.space.com/nasa-centaur-missions-centaurus-chimera.html
29P Fragments..... http://www.astronomerstelegram.org/?read=13164
Hera has been chosen at the most recent ESA budget meeting. There is also a call out for amateur astronomer to start characterizing possible flyby candidates:
http://www.esa.int/Safety_Security/Hera/Amateur_astronomers_help_choose_asteroid_flybys_for_Hera
https://www.cosmos.esa.int/documents/336356/336472/NEO-related_activities_in_Germany_-_Harris_2020-09-24+(1).pdf#page=3 from flight spares of Dawn's Framing Camera to a https://www.cosmos.esa.int/documents/336356/336472/HERA_mission_-_Carnelli_2020-09-24.pdf#page=8 from the company https://jena-optronik.de/produkte/sternsensoren/astrohead.html. The motivation for this decision is "unknown", well at least to me!
It seems as though mega-comet 2014 UN271 will be the subject of sustained study and lively discussion, even if it never becomes the object of a mission. In light of Rule 2.8 I’m parking this post here with the request that the mods consider moving it to its own thread.
A very nice find.
With such a high inclination, I don't think it's really within even ESA's Comet Interceptor capabilities? The perihelion is far out of the plane of the solar system (and 11 AU is quite far for a SEP mission). Perhaps the ascending and descending nodes?
According to the JPL Small-Body Database Browser period of this object is more than 612,000 years and the aphelion (Q) is more than 14,411 A.U. That is almost a quarter of a light-year.
This is based on the latest observation in 2018 and there is no computation of uncertainty, so the specifics are likely to change. But clearly this thing is coming from way out there.
Yeah, this comet is way outside the area Comet Intercepter can target. CI requires the comet to reach a heliocentric distance of 0.8 to 1.2 AU and the encounter has to take place near the ecliptic.
I wouldn't be surprised if we'll start seeing some observations come in over the next week or so now that it's announced. If Hubble weren't out of commission right now, this is the exact sort of discovery that would be great for it to take a look at.
Hera will have a spacecraft https://www.cosmos.esa.int/documents/336356/336472/Moissl_Hera_SMPAG_2021-03-25.pdf/ce57ce6a-4e0c-6711-ab5c-083c7255b8f0?t=1617383460726#page=6 onboard.
Nice https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0M3gnGtr2o about JAXA's http://www.issibj.ac.cn/News/202107/W020210709332973665113.png expedition to (3200) Phaethon.
NEA Scout has a (tiny!) target:
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasa-solar-sail-mission-to-chase-tiny-asteroid-after-artemis-i-launch
2020 GE, about half the size of Habauysa2's target (and getting there a lot sooner, apparently after an Earth flyby by the rock in 2023.
Flyby velocity of only 30 m/s is another record.
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