Asteroid Impact Mission (AIM)
Transcription
Asteroid Impact Mission (AIM)
Asteroid Impact Mission (AIM) Andrés Gálvez, ESA HQ, Paris, France Ian Carnelli, ESA HQ, Paris, France Carlos Corral, ESTEC, Noordwijk, The Netherlands & the AIDA team (JHU/APL, NASA, OCA. DLR) NEO mission studies in ESA Near-Earth Objects (NEOs); impact probability is very low but effects can be extremely severe ; ESA addresses risk assessment and works with data users, but these users also need missions There is still very limited practical knowledge on the best technology approach to tackle NEO impact threats. NASA/JHU ESA Don Quijote study After ESA’s Mission Advisory Panel recommendation, ESA studied Don Quijote asteroid mission Two launches Interceptor Rendezvous Not affordable techno demonstration for ESA 5/29/2012 3 AIDA Background The Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) study undertaken by APL in 2011-2012 with participation of NASA NASA HQ, GSFC, JSC, LaRC, JPL Asteroid impact and deflection, The Asteroid Impact Mission (AIM) study undertaken by ESA in 2012 with OCA, DLR Impact test and characterization 5/29/2012 4 The AIDA concept AIDA will send two spacecraft to the binary asteroid 65803 Didymos Asteroid impactor Asteroid rendezvous Each AIDA component is independent and has unique value AIDA = AIM + DART 5/29/2012 5 Target: Didymos 5/29/2012 Didymos Spectral type Xk Primary rotation 2.26 hr Binary orbit period Binary orbit semi-major axis Primary diameter Secondary diameter Magnitude H Pole Solutions 11.91 hr 1.05 km 800 m 150 m 18 (λ,β) = (157°,19°); (329°,-70°) Spacecraft impact (in 2022) will change mutual orbit of binary Period change is measurable from Earth by shift in mutual event timing Heliocentric Orbit Eccentricity 0.384 Inclination 3.41° Semi-major axis 1.645 AU Heliocentric period 2.11 yr Aphelion 2.28 AU Perihelion 1.01 AU 6 Key Objectives AIM as a monitoring mission target characterization through a rendezvous and observation from a distance characterization also from ground (radar, optical) – simpler, more robust mission autonavigation demonstration cost target under 150M€ Distance: 5-17 km (100 km for DART impact) Characterization point NAC, thermal IR, NIR spectrom. to Sun 5/29/2012 7 AIM Payload Objectives P# Parameter Relevance to goal Possible measurement / is it a must have? 1 • Orbital state • Key to determine momentum • Ground (photometry, radar), in-space (CAM) – a must 2 • Rotation state • Key to determine momentum • Ground (photometry, radar), in-space (CAM) – a must 3 • Size, Mass, Gravity • Mass key to momentum, size to shape, volume, gravity to internal structure, operations • Mass from binary orbit, shape model from CAM (or LIDAR), a must, gravity field RSE (not a must?) 4 • Geology, surface properties • Bulk composition, material mechanical properties, surface thermal inertia • VIS photometry to derive spectral type (must), IR spectrometer mineralogy (not a must) TIR for Yarkowski / YORP (not a must if not large source of error) Density, internal structure • • Affects absorption of impact energy, “data point” for study of asteroid mitigation. • • 5 • 5/29/2012 • Bulk values derived from mass, shape model Radar Tomography, seismic probing. l largely increases complexity and not a must (conclusion Don Quijote/NEO1). = outside scope AIM 8 AIM Strawman payload Instrument Mass (kg) Power (W) FOV (deg) Aperture (mm) Dimensions (mm) Notes NAC 2.0 0.75 5.3 x 5.3 14.2 200x150x50 Combines navigation and science purposes. Measure orbital, rotational state, shape. Heritage: AMIE (SMART-1). Micro Laser Altimeter 2.5 4 0.003 30 200x150x50 Precise shape model Low TRL in Europe (BELA, ALADIN). Operational range should be higher than 10 km. Thermal IR Imager 1.5 1 4 40 60x40x40 Study of surface temperature and thermal inertia. Heritage: MERTIS (BepiColombo). Mass assumes further miniaturization. NIR spectrometer 1.5 7 4 38 100x50x50 Global mapping of the surface mineralogy. Heritage from SIR (SMART-1) and SIR-2 (Chandrayaan-1). Mass estimate assumes further miniaturization 5/29/2012 9 Payload Options AIM Camera p/l Dust Detector TIR Laser Altimeter Surface system Radio Science Experiment 5/29/2012 10 Interplanetary transfer (EP option) Launch 19/08/2019 Escape velocity [km/s] 1.0 Declination [deg] -14.46 Escape mass [kg] 400 Earth swing-by 07/11/2020 Infinite velocity at SB [km/s] 5.44 Vel. at pericentre [km/s] 10.8 Pericentre altitude [km] 2854 Arrival 01/08/2022 Final mass [kg] 324 SEP delta-v [km/s] 2.9 Xenon consumption [kg]: 73 Hydrazine consumption [kg]: 5 Thruster on time [d]: 213 Total Impulse[10^6kg m/s]: 1.05 5/29/2012 11 AIM Spacecraft Concept 5/29/2012 12 AIM Mass Budget Propulsion Stage Mass (kg) Rendezvous S/C Mass (kg) Structure Dry Mass w.o. margin 269.60 Dry Mass + 20% margin 323.52 23.21 Clampbands S/C I/F S/C adaptor 6.60 16.61 Mechanisms 35.20 Clamp Band spin table Spring set spin table Clamp Band prop module Spring set prop module 14.30 3.30 SRM Star 48 137.55 5/29/2012 Wet Mass 9.00 73.00 405.52 3.30 137.55 Propellant STAR 48 Propellant Xenon 14.30 Propulsion Dry Mass Propulsion Stage Propellant Hydrazine 195.96 1222.00 13 A Simpler Mission than Don Quijote DQ 2 s/c launched separately Impactor launched after Orbiter rdv NEA CoG Δa ≥ 100 m Orbiter and RSE required AIM/DART 2 s/c developed and launched separately AIM launched to rdv (in principle) before DART hits Binary ΔP/P>0.1, no requirement on Δa Comment AIM and DART C/D phase independence AIM and DART still fully meaningful in absence of the other spacecraft Measure in-space (CAM) and ground (photometry), Co-flying, orbiting or RSE not strictly required Simple telecom subsystem and operations possible In-situ experiment In-situ as an option, only at end of mission likely after impact Secondary p/l depends of mass, operations cost, PI contribution Autonomous optical navigation 2 days before impact Technology experiment for rendezvous spacecraft Autonomous optical Autonav as an option only. Not mandatory 5/29/2012 14 Impact Test and Characterisation P# Parameter Relevance to goal AIDA measurement 1 Orbital state Key to determine momentum Ground (photometry, radar), in-space (CAM/ LIDAR) 2 Rotation state Key to determine momentum Ground (photometry, radar), in-space (CAM) 3 Size, Mass, Gravity 4 Mass key to momentum, size to shape, volume, gravity to internal structure, operations Geology, surface Bulk composition, material mechanical properties properties, surface thermal inertia 5 Density, internal Affects absorption of impact energy, structure “data point” for study of asteroid mitigation. 6 Sub-surface properties Bulk composition, if significant changes w.r.t surface, post-impact change to thermal inertia 5/29/2012 Mass from binary orbit, shape model from CAM (+LIDAR), gravity field RSE (option) • • AIM+DART images VIS photometry to derive spectral type, IR spectrometer mineralogy • TIR for Yarkovski / YORP, • surface payload (option) Bulk value derived from mass, shape model Crater interior (CAM, IR) 15 AIDA Firsts Themes Comments First demonstration of capability to deflect an asteroid and measure the trajectory change Both capabilities, to deflect and to measure the deflection, are required to assure that mitigation reduces (and does not increase) an impact hazard First rendezvous with a binary asteroid Binary systems are an important component of Solar System small body populations and planetary and stellar systems First visit to an X-type NEO Spectral type X is of unknown composition First characterization of hypervelocity impacts on an asteroid Most asteroids, and NEAs in close binaries, are believed to be rubble piles, but we don’t know how they would respond to large scale impacts (needed information to understand asteroid collisional evolution and size distributions, as well as asteroid deflection for hazard mitigation) First active probes of internal structure and measurements of surface geotechnical properties Although Didymos is not necessarily a human exploration target, these measurements expand our knowledge base of asteroid surfaces and help prepare for human exploration 5/29/2012 16 Summary ESA, OCA, DLR studied AIM, a simple binary asteroid rendezvous inspired on “Don Quijote” Ongoing work on JHU/APL’s DART to complement AIM for a joint mission to Didymos, eclipsing binary AIM+ DART = AIDA (Asteroid Impact Deflection Assessment), an affordable, risk free cooperation AIDA is a good opportunity to study hypervelocity impacts, ejecta and crater formation and to deepen our knowledge on how impact affects dynamics of objects in space Call for payload ideas coming soon 5/29/2012 17 AIDA mission rationale report Naomi Murdoch (OCA, Coor.) Paul Abell (NASA) Ian Carnelli (ESA) Benoit Carry (ESA) Andy Cheng (JHU/APL) Gerhard Drolshagen (ESA) Moritz Fontaine (ESA) Andrés Gálvez (ESA) Detlef Koschny (ESA) Michael Kueppers (ESA) Patrick Michel (OCA) Cheryl Reed (JHU/APL) Stephan Ulamec (DLR) ... http://www.esa.int/neo Contributions on tests or payload ideas compatible with the mission are very welcome