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50 years of Space Exploration. G. Tancredi Depto. Astronomía - Fac. Ciencias Montevideo - Uruguay. Classification of space missions. Spacecraft or space probe Fly-by Rendezvous Orbiter Atmospheric probe Atmospheric ballon Lander Surface penetrator Surface vehicle - rover.
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50 years of Space Exploration G. Tancredi Depto. Astronomía - Fac. Ciencias Montevideo - Uruguay
Classification of space missions Spacecraft or space probe • Fly-by • Rendezvous • Orbiter • Atmospheric probe • Atmospheric ballon • Lander • Surface penetrator • Surface vehicle - rover
Scientific Instruments Detection: • Direct – the instruments interact with the target • Remote: • Passive – receives the radiation • Active – Emits and receives the reflected radiation Direct Detectors: • High-energy particles • Charged particles of low energy • Plasma detectors • Dust detectors • Magnetometers • Mass spectrometers • Sample collectors
Remote Detectors • Passive: • Radio • Imaging (CCD) • Polarimeters • Photometers • Spectrographs • Infrared Radiometers • Active: • Radares of sytnthetic aperture • Altimeters
Navigation Systems Determination of: radial distance, radial velocity, angular direction, velocity in the sky-plane Techniques based on tracking data: • Estimate of the Velocity from doppler-shift of the downlink signal • Estimate of Distance from time delay between up and downlink signal • Estimate of the angular direction from a pair of antennas of the Deep Space Network (DSN) Autonomous techniques • Reference stars • Using the target as reference
The first steps in the space • ’57 - Sputnik 1 (URSS) – First artificial satellite • ’58 - Explorer III (USA) – Discovery of the Van Allen belts • ’59 - Luna 1 (URSS) – Discovery of the solar wind • ’59 - Luna 2 (URSS) – Impact on lunar surface • ’59 - Luna 3 (URSS) – Fly-by of the dark side of the Moon • ’61 - Venera 1 (URSS) – Fly-by of Venus • ’62 - Mariner 2 (USA) – Approach to 350.000 km to Venus. Estimate of T=425°C • ’65 - Mariner 4 (USA) – Fly-by of Mars • ’66 - Luna 9 (URSS) – Landing on the lunar surface and first close by photos • ’67 - Venera 4 (URSS) – Entrance to the Venus atmosphere, sampling of the extreme conditions of pressure and temperature • ’67 - Surveyor 6 (USA) – Landing and take off from the Moon
’68 - Apolo 8 (USA) – Manned fly-by to the Moon • ’69 - Apolo 11 (USA) – Manned landing to the Moon - 6 later landing until ’72 • ’71 - Luna 17 (URSS) – Landing with robotic rovers (Lunokhod) • ’71 - Mars 3 (URSS) – Landing on Mars • ’71 - Mariner 9 (USA) - Images of Phobos and Deimos, Mars’ orbiter, detection of a martian storm • ’73 - Pioneer 10 & ’74 Pioneer 11 (USA) – Fly-by to Jupiter. In ’79 fly-by to Saturn (Pioneer 11) • ’74 - Mariner 10 (USA) – Several fly-byes to Mercury • ’75 - Venera 9 (URSS) – Landing on Venus • ’76 - Viking 1 y 2 (USA) – Landing on Marts - Experiments searching for life. The mission was trasmitting data until ’82 • ’79 - Voyager 1 y 2 (USA) – Fly-by to Jupiter • ’80-’81 - Fly-by toSaturn • ’86 - Fly-by toUranus • ’89 - Fly-by toNeptune
Where are the Pioneers and the Voyagers now? July 2007 Pioneer 10 - 94 AU (*) Pioneer 11 – 74 AU (*) Voyager 1 - 103 AU Voyager 2 - 83 AU (*) Does not function
A few missions during ’80s Japanese and European entering into the game • ’86 - Giotto (ESA), Vega 1 & 2 (URSS), Sakigake y Suisei (Japan) Fly-by to Comet Halley (Giotto) (500 km) • ’88 - Phobos 1 & 2 (URSS) – Sent to land in fly-by and land in Phobos, but they failed.
Reconquering the space in the ’90s • Magellan (USA) – Venus orbiter (’89-’94) • Ulysses (USA-ESA) – Polar orbiter around the Sun (’90 - ...) • Yohkoh (Japan - USA) – Solar flares (’91) • Clementine (USA) – Lunar orbiter (’94) • Failures: Mars Observer (USA) & Mars 96 (Russia) • Galileo (USA-ESA) – Jupiter orbiter and atmospheric probe ’95 - ’03 • SOHO (ESA-USA) – Solar oscillations, corona and solar wind (’96 - ...) • NEAR (USA) – Orbiter around asteroid 433 Eros (’99 - ’01) • Mars Pathfinder (USA) – Mars lander and Rover (’97) • Mars Global Surveyor (USA) – Mars orbiter (’98 - ...) • Lunar Prospector – Polar lunar orbiter (’98)
Mercurio Mercury Caloris basincrater with a diameter over 1300 km Region of chaotic terrain in the antipodes of Caloris Basin
Gula Mons (vulcano 3 km height) and Sif Mons (vulcano 2km height)
Sapas Mons Vulcano of 400 km in diameter and 1.5 km height
Crater Addams - 90 km. diameter Lava flodd extends over 600 km from the crater rim
Crater Danilova 49 km diameter with central peak Impact crater
Ice in the in the bottom of a permanently shadowed crater close to the southern pole of the Moon?
Lunar Prospector(’98- ’99) NASAcontrolled crash into the Moon
SMART 1 (’03-’06) ESA Ion engine
Japanese mission to the Moon SELENE – KAGUYA (’07) Main Orbiter and two small satellites (Relay Satellite and VRAD Satellite)