The Power of Sample Return Missions - Stardust and Hayabusa

被引:4
|
作者
Sandford, Scott A. [1 ]
机构
[1] NASA, Astrophys Branch, Ames Res Ctr, Moffett Field, CA 94035 USA
来源
MOLECULAR UNIVERSE | 2011年 / 280期
关键词
Stardust Mission; Hayabusa Mission; comets: general; comets: individual (Wild 2); asteroids; sample return; COMET; 81P/WILD-2; ASTEROID ITOKAWA; ISOTOPIC COMPOSITIONS; PARTICLES; WILD-2; MATTER;
D O I
10.1017/S174392131102504X
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
Sample return missions offer opportunities to learn things about other objects in our Solar System (and beyond) that cannot be determined by observations using in situ spacecraft. This is largely because the returned samples can be studied in terrestrial laboratories where the analyses are not limited by the constraints - power, mass, time, precision, etc. - imposed by normal spacecraft operations. In addition, the returned samples serve as a scientific resource that is available far into the future; the study of the samples can continue long after the original spacecraft mission is finished. This means the samples can be continually revisited as both our scientific understanding and analytical techniques improve with time. These advantages come with some additional difficulties, however. In particular, sample return missions must deal with the additional difficulties of proximity operations near the objects they are to sample, and they must be capable of successfully making a round trip between the Earth and the sampled object. Such missions therefore need to take special precautions against unique hazards and be designed to successfully complete relatively extended mission durations. Despite these difficulties, several recent missions have managed to successfully complete sample returns from a number of Solar System objects. These include the Stardust mission (samples from Comet 81P/Wild 2), the Hayabusa mission (samples from asteroid 25143 Itokawa), and the Genesis mission (samples of solar wind). This paper will review the advantages and difficulties of sample return missions in general and will summarize some key findings of the recent Stardust and Hayabusa missions.
引用
收藏
页码:275 / 287
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] FROM HAYABUSA TO HAYABUSA2: PRESENT STATUS AND PLANS FOR SAMPLE CURATIONS OF ASTEROIDAL SAMPLE RETURN MISSIONS BY JAXA.
    Yada, T.
    Sakamoto, K.
    Yoshitake, M.
    Kumagai, K.
    Nishimura, M.
    Nakano, Y.
    Furuya, S.
    Abe, M.
    Okada, T.
    Tachibana, S.
    Yurimoto, H.
    Fujimoto, M.
    METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, 2018, 53 : 6117 - 6117
  • [2] Investigation of cutting methods for small samples of Hayabusa and future sample return missions
    Uesugi, Masayuki
    Noguchi, Ryo
    Matsumoto, Tooru
    Matsuno, Junya
    Nagano, Takashi
    Tsuchiyama, Akira
    Harada, Shigenori
    Yokoyama, Kaori
    Yodo, Yoshiaki
    Takeda, Noboru
    Yada, Toru
    Yakame, Shogo
    Karouji, Yuzuru
    Ishibashi, Yukihiro
    Abe, Masanao
    Okada, Tatsuaki
    Fujimura, Akio
    Ebihara, Mitsuru
    Kitajima, Fumio
    Nagao, Keisuke
    Nakamura, Tomoki
    Naraoka, Hiroshi
    Noguchi, Takaaki
    Okazaki, Ryuji
    Yurimoto, Hisayoshi
    METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, 2014, 49 (07) : 1186 - 1201
  • [3] Aerodynamics of Stardust Sample Return Capsule
    Mitcheltree, RA
    Wilmoth, RG
    Cheatwood, FM
    Brauckmann, GJ
    Greene, FA
    JOURNAL OF SPACECRAFT AND ROCKETS, 1999, 36 (03) : 429 - 435
  • [4] Aerodynamics of Stardust Sample Return Capsule
    Mitcheltree, R.A.
    Wilmoth, R.G.
    Cheatwood, F.M.
    Brauckmann, G.J.
    Greene, F.A.
    Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets, 36 (03): : 429 - 435
  • [5] Aerothermodynamics of the Stardust sample return capsule
    Olynick, D
    Chen, YK
    Tauber, ME
    JOURNAL OF SPACECRAFT AND ROCKETS, 1999, 36 (03) : 442 - 462
  • [6] Thermal protection system development, testing, and qualification for atmospheric probes and sample return missions Examples for Saturn, Titan and Stardust-type sample return
    Venkatapathy, E.
    Laub, B.
    Hartman, G. J.
    Arnold, J. O.
    Wright, M. J.
    Allen, G. A., Jr.
    ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH, 2009, 44 (01) : 138 - 150
  • [7] Stardust:: A comet sample return mission.
    Brownlee, DE
    Tsou, P
    Clark, B
    Hanner, MS
    Hörz, F
    Kissel, J
    McDonnell, JAM
    Newburn, RL
    Sandford, S
    Sekanina, Z
    Tuzzolino, AJ
    Zolensky, M
    METEORITICS & PLANETARY SCIENCE, 2000, 35 : A35 - A35
  • [8] STARDUST: A Comet Coma Flyby Sample Return
    Tsou, P.
    2009 IEEE AEROSPACE CONFERENCE, VOLS 1-7, 2009, : 192 - 204
  • [9] Stardust sample return capsule design experience
    Willcockson, WH
    JOURNAL OF SPACECRAFT AND ROCKETS, 1999, 36 (03) : 470 - 474
  • [10] Stardust and Stardust Next missions
    Silen, Johan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ASTROBIOLOGY, 2008, 7 (01) : 83 - 83