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- From: stevef@awolf.Jpl.Nasa.Gov (Steve Flanagan)
- Subject: Re: No asteroid flybys (was Re: Cassini Undergoes Intense Design Review)
- Message-ID: <stevef.724437354@awolf>
- Sender: news@llyene.jpl.nasa.gov
- Nntp-Posting-Host: awolf.jpl.nasa.gov
- Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- References: <1992Dec10.154047.7419@elroy.jpl.nasa.gov> <Bz54t3.2Gq@techbook.com> <1992Dec12.150529.1@fnalo.fnal.gov> <schumach.724381783@convex.convex.com>
- Date: Tue, 15 Dec 1992 16:35:54 GMT
- Lines: 26
-
- schumach@convex.com (Richard A. Schumacher) writes:
-
- >>Nope. It was announced in *Aviation Leak* that the policy of seeking
- >>asteroid flybys has been dropped to keep costs down on Cassini. :-(
-
- >Swell. WIth our luck the damn thing will probably wind up colliding
- >with an asteroid, which collision would have been recognized had
- >we but continued the search for flyby possibilities...
-
- Actually, one of the main reasons for dropping the asteroid flyby for Cassini
- is that there really aren't any good flyby opportunities for the baseline
- trajectory. The best we could come up with was a 22 km/s flyby of asteroid
- 1987 SJ4. This is due to the fact that the only time Cassini enters the
- asteroid belt is on the Earth to Jupiter leg of the trajectory. This leg
- follows the "double gravity assist", the fast (8 week) transfer from Venus
- to Earth, which dramatically increases the spacecrafts heliocentric velocity.
- As a result, Cassini's velocity relative to *any* main belt asteroid is going
- to be very high, which makes the flyby less attractive scientifically and more
- challenging operationally.
-
-
- Steve Flanagan
- Cassini Mission Design Team
- stevef@awolf.jpl.nasa.gov
- Standard disclaimers apply.
-
-