Lucy, Discovery Mission 13 - a grand tour of the Jupiter Trojans |
Lucy, Discovery Mission 13 - a grand tour of the Jupiter Trojans |
Jan 4 2017, 08:20 PM
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 71 Joined: 12-December 16 Member No.: 8089 |
Obligatory new thread for the Lucy mission, now that it has been selected by NASA to launch as Discovery mission 13! Lucy will launch in 2021, and will perform a flyby of a main belt asteroid in 2025, before making flybys of at least six Jupiter trojans from 2027 to 2033. The mission, led by the Southwest Research Institute and Principal Investigator Harold F. Levison, will send a spacecraft carrying updated versions of New Horizons' LORRI and RALPH instruments.
Be sure to check out r/lucymission on reddit as well! EDIT: I have made a mistake. Could a kind mod please move this thread to the "Cometary and Asteroid Missions" subforum? ADMIN: Done. Note for the new members: Generally speaking, please consult a member of the admin/mod team before creating new topics. Not a hard rule, but it does help to keep the place tidy. Also, we encourage all members to review this welcome post for orientation purposes. Thanks! |
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Jun 12 2022, 12:50 AM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 200 Joined: 20-November 05 From: Mare Desiderii Member No.: 563 |
Tidbits on Lucy solar array deployment:
NASA’s Lucy Mission Continues Solar Array Deployment Process (Lucy blog, June 8): not latched yet, but four attempts (May 9, May 12, May 26, June 2) all show array continuing to open and stiffen. More attempts are possible. Efforts continue to fully deploy Lucy solar array (spacenews,com, also June 8) has quotes from Hal Levison: QUOTE “That’s allowing us to make significant process towards latch, but we’re not latched yet,” Hal Levison, principal investigator for Lucy at the Southwest Research Institute, said in a presentation at a meeting of NASA’s Small Bodies Assessment Group June 8. “We are seeing significant tensioning of the array.”
That tensioning, he said, is a positive sign even though the array has not latched into place. “It makes it likely that, even if we don’t get the thing latched, we’ll be able to fly the mission as-is,” he said, noting the array, in its current configuration, is generating more than 90% of its planned power. |
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 27th May 2024 - 06:57 PM |
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