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Hayabusa

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Hayabusa spacecraft, early concept sketch
Organization JAXA
Launch date 9 May 2003
Mass 510 kg (dry 380 kg)
Current destination Earth, on return leg from asteroid 25143 Itokawa
Mission asteroid sample return
Instruments
AMICA multiband imaging camera
LIDAR laser altimeter
NIRS near-infrared spectrometer
XRS x-ray spectrometer

Hayabusa (はやぶさ - peregrine falcon) is an unmanned space mission led by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency to collect a sample of material from a small near-Earth asteroid named 25143 Itokawa (dimensions 540 meters by 270 meters by 210 meters) and return the sample to Earth for further analysis.

The Hayabusa spacecraft, formerly known as MUSES-C (ミューゼスC), was launched on 9 May2003 and rendezvoused with Itokawa in mid-September 2005. Having arrived at Itokawa, Hayabusa is studying the asteroid's shape, spin, topography, color, composition, density, and history. In November 2005, it successfully landed on the asteroid to collect samples, and after technical difficulties with the spacecraft, it is slated to return those samples to Earth by June 2010.

The spacecraft also carried a detachable mini-lander but it failed to reach the surface (see Minerva mini-lander below).

Mission firsts

Other spacecraft, notably Galileo and NEAR Shoemaker, have visited asteroids before, but the Hayabusa mission, if successful, will mark the first time that an asteroid sample is returned to Earth for analysis.

In addition, Hayabusa is the first spacecraft designed to deliberately land on an asteroid and then take off again (NEAR Shoemaker made a controlled descent to the surface of 433 Eros in 2000, but it was not designed as a lander and was eventually deactivated after it arrived). Technically, Hayabusa is not designed to 'land': it simply touches the surface with its sample capturing device and then moves away. However, it is the first craft designed from the onset to make contact with the surface of an asteroid.

Despite its designer's intention, Hayabusa did land and sit on the asteroid surface for about 30 minutes (see the November 19 entry in the recent events section below).

Mission profile

The Hayabusa spacecraft was launched on 9 May, 2003 at 04:29:25 UTC on an M-5 rocket from the Uchinoura Space Center (still called Kagoshima Space Center at that time). Following launch, the spacecraft's name was changed from the original MUSES-C to Hayabusa, the Japanese word for falcon. The spacecraft's xenon ion engines (two separate units, each with two exhausts), operating near-continuously for two years, slowly moved Hayabusa toward a September 2005 rendezvous with Itokawa. As it arrived, the spacecraft did not go into orbit around the asteroid, but remained in a station-keeping heliocentric orbit close by.

Hayabusa surveyed the asteroid surface from a distance of about 20 km, the "gate position". Afterwards, the spacecraft moved closer to the surface ("home position"), and then approached the asteroid for a series of soft landings and collection of samples at the safest site. Autonomous optical navigation was employed extensively during this period because the long communication delay prohibits Earth-based real-time commanding. At the second Hayabusa touchdown with its deployable collection horn, the spacecraft was programmed to fire tiny projectiles at the surface and then collect the resulting spray. Any samples that were collected are now held inside a separate re-entry capsule. However, it is currently uncertain whether the metal projectiles were fired during contact.

After a few months in close proximity to the asteroid, the spacecraft was scheduled to fire its engines to begin its cruise back to Earth. This maneuver was delayed due to problems with attitude control and the thrusters of the craft. Once it is on its return trajectory, the re-entry capsule will be detached from the main spacecraft at a distance of about 300,000 to 400,000 km from the Earth, and the capsule will coast on a ballistic trajectory, re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. This is currently planned for June 2010. The capsule will experience peak deceleration of about 25 G and heating rates approximately 30 times those experienced by the Apollo spacecraft. It will land via parachute near Woomera, Australia.

MINERVA mini-lander

Hayabusa carried a tiny mini-spacecraft (weighing only 591 g) named MINERVA (short for MIcro/Nano Experimental Robot Vehicle for Asteroid). Unfortunately, an error during deployment resulted in the craft's failure..

This solar-powered, box-shaped vehicle was designed to take advantage of Itokawa's very low gravity by hopping great distances across the surface of the asteroid, relaying images from its cameras to Hayabusa whenever the two spacecraft were in sight of one another.[link]

MINERVA was deployed on November 12, 2005. The lander release command was sent from Earth, but before the command could arrive, Hayabusa's altimeter measured its distance from Itokawa to be 44m and thus started an automatic altitude keeping sequence. As a result, when the MINERVA release command arrived, MINERVA was released while the probe was ascending and at a higher altitude than intended, so that it escaped Itokawa's gravitational pull and tumbled into space. [link] [link] [link]

Had it been successful, MINERVA would have been the first 'space hopper' to see action. Instead, it joins ranks with the hoppers carried on the failed Soviet Phobos missions, which also never saw use.

The United States space agency NASA had originally planned to build a miniature rover as part of the Hayabusa mission, but the project, developed by JPL and called Muses-CN, was cancelled in November, 2000, for budgeting reasons.

Scientific and engineering importance of the mission

Scientists' current understanding of asteroids depends greatly on meteorite samples, but it is very difficult to match up meteorite samples with the exact asteroids from which they came. Hayabusa will solve this problem by bringing back pristine samples from a specific, well-characterized asteroid. Accordingly, Hayabusa "will bridge the gap between ground observation data of asteroids and laboratory analysis of meteorite and cosmic dust collections," says mission scientist Hajime Yano. 1 Also in comparing the data from the onboard instruments of the Hayabusa with the data from the Near Shoemaker mission will put the knowledge on a wider level.

The Hayabusa mission has a very deep engineering importance for JAXA, too. First it will help JAXA to further test its technologies in the fields of ion engines, autonomous and optical navigation, deep space communication, and close movement on objects with low gravity among others. Second, since it was the first-ever soft contact with the surface of an asteroid it has enormous influence on further asteroid missions.

Changes in mission plan

The Hayabusa mission profile has been modified several times, both before and after launch.

In-flight event log

Timeline of future events

External links

Official sites

News sites

Notes

 


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