Will Juice flyby an asteroid during its cruise? - JUICE
News about the Juice mission
The following news are written by the Juice community to share updates and information about the mission.
In addition other news and stories can be accessed via the following links:
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ESA Juice Archive: esa.int ,
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ESA Science and Technology: sci.esa.int (last update in 2019).
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External News about the juice mission
Moon-Earth flyby
CNES - JUICE: Earth and Moon through MAJIS eyes
MPI - JUICE: A Look at our Blue Planet
ESA - Juice admires Moon during lunar flyby
ESA - Juice’s view of the Pale Blue Dot
ESA - Juice’s navigation camera gets first taste of space
ESA - First views from Juice’s science camera
ESA - Juice rerouted to Venus in world’s first lunar-Earth flyby
ASI - La Luna e la Terra in posa per la camera JANUS durante il primo flyby di JUICE (italian)
Will JUICE flyby an asteroid during its cruise?
The discussion took place with the Juice scientists and the ESA project in the second half of 2023. Given the excellent Juice launch performances, it was legitimate to discuss a possible asteroid flyby during the cruise phase.
Even if an asteroid flyby is not an immediate milestone (most likely to take place in 2029), a decision was preferably to be made early for two reasons: first, such a flyby is not in the mission baseline and would need a significant amount of preparation; secondly, the next update of the nominal trajectory requires the best knowledge of the propellant status to study various options.
Preliminary mission analysis and publications from the scientific community gave some indication of the possible flyby opportunities.
An asteroid flyby was obviously of strong interest for the remote sensing instrument teams (MAJIS and JANUS). A compelling target was the asteroid 223 Rosa. However, preliminary analysis indicated that its flyby would require significant propellant usage, which is equivalent to the manoeuvre to reach the 200 km orbit at Ganymede. Much smaller objects requiring less propellant usage (10 m/s) were identified, but not characterized in details yet.
Eventually, the scientists and the project decided to not implement an asteroid flyby, to keep all propellant margins to improve the science return of the nominal mission, for a potential mission extension and for safety.
Olivier Witasse, 11 June 2024
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