DocumentCode :
3053237
Title :
The Bering mission space segment
Author :
Thomsen, P.L. ; Hansen, Flemming
Author_Institution :
Danish Space Res. Inst., Copenhagen, Denmark
fYear :
2003
fDate :
20-22 Nov. 2003
Firstpage :
253
Lastpage :
258
Abstract :
This paper describes the space segment of the proposed Bering Mission. The proposed mission shall autonomously discover near Earth objects (NEOs) and asteroids and determine their orbital parameters, light curve, surface characteristics and internal properties, mass, albedo, and acquire high quality images and magnetic properties. The mission proposed, will generate flux, size and orbital distributions of NEOs down to 2-20 m diameter, over most of the inner solar system. The mission proposed here, comprises two spacecraft flying in a loose formation for 7+ years in an elliptical orbit between /spl sim/0.7 AU (/spl sim/Venus orbit) and /spl sim/3.5 AU. A powerful suite of instruments is proposed. Each satellite has an Advanced Stellar Compass (ASC) system with 7 camera heads, a folding mirror based 0.3 m multi-spectral telescope imager, a boom-mounted magnetometer and a laser ranger. Bering is proposed as a slow spinner, which necessitates a rotationally symmetric body and the boom coincident with the axis of rotation. Other configurations are also under discussion, and the configuration presented in this paper only comprises initial ideas and discussions, which indeed need further analysis and design.
Keywords :
aerospace instrumentation; asteroids; astronomical photometry; space vehicles; 0.7 to 3.5 AU; 2 to 20 m; Advanced Stellar Compass system; Bering mission space segment; albedo; asteroids; boom mounted magnetometer; camera heads; elliptical orbit; inner solar system; laser ranger; light curve; magnetic properties; multispectral telescope imager; near Earth objects; orbital distribution; orbital parameters; rotationally symmetric body; spacecraft; surface properties; Earth; Gold; Image segmentation; Instruments; Magnetic properties; Satellites; Solar power generation; Solar system; Space missions; Space vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Recent Advances in Space Technologies, 2003. RAST '03. International Conference on. Proceedings of
Conference_Location :
Istanbul, Turkey
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8142-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/RAST.2003.1303916
Filename :
1303916
Link To Document :
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