DocumentCode
2433938
Title
A Low Cost Rendezvous Mission to 99942 Apophis
Author
Howard, Regan ; Gillett, Ross
Author_Institution
Regan Howard Orbital Sci. Corp., Dulles
fYear
2007
fDate
3-10 March 2007
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
10
Abstract
In recent years the public has become more aware of the potentially catastrophic consequences of an asteroid collision with Earth. Congress has taken note of this and instructed NASA to develop a program to determine the resources required to detect, track, characterize, and, if necessary, mitigate potentially hazardous objects. Characterization of an asteroid deemed sufficiently dangerous requires a space mission to determine its key attributes with sufficient accuracy to implement a mitigation scheme. Characterization mission designs to date have been based on the NASA Discovery mission model. This paper presents an approach for reducing the cost of NEO characterization missions by adapting low cost spacecraft and launch vehicle designs now in production by Orbital Sciences. Specifically, we show how the configuration of one of Orbital´s small spacecraft designs coupled with a liquid propulsion system from an Orbital GEO communications spacecraft design is adapted to support delivery of a small science payload to the potentially hazardous near Earth asteroid 99942 Apophis. Using a C3 of less than 10 km2/s2, the Minotaur V low cost launch vehicle will place the spacecraft at Apophis in 321 days from a 2 May 2012 launch.
Keywords
asteroids; space vehicles; 99942 Apophis; GEO communications spacecraft; Minotaur V; NASA Discovery; asteroid collision; catastrophic consequences; low cost launch vehicle; near-earth object; potentially hazardous space object detection; Collision mitigation; Costs; Earth; NASA; Object detection; Payloads; Production; Propulsion; Space missions; Space vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Aerospace Conference, 2007 IEEE
Conference_Location
Big Sky, MT
ISSN
1095-323X
Print_ISBN
1-4244-0524-6
Electronic_ISBN
1095-323X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/AERO.2007.352749
Filename
4161303
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