The spacecraft launched from French Guiana on April 23, 2023, and is ultimately bound for Jupiter to study the planet and three of its icy, potentially oceanic, moons: Ganymede, Callisto, and Europa. But in order to get there, it needs to perform a series of gravity assists, flying past the planets of the inner solar system and using their gravitational tides to slingshot itself toward its target — a technique that saves overall fuel.
On Nov. 17, JUICE performed a 43-minute burn to get into position for its upcoming Earth-moon flyby, the first-ever double gravity assist of the two celestial bodies. It was the spacecraft's largest maneuver so far. This maneuver used up roughly 363 kilograms [800 pounds] of fuel – or almost exactly 10% of the 3,650 kilograms [8,047 pounds] of fuel that JUICE launched with.
This burn is one of two necessary to put JUICE on the right trajectory for the Earth-moon gravity assist, the first in the series of assists, which will occur in Aug. 2024. This first burn did 95% of the work, changing JUICE’s velocity by almost 200 meters per second. JUICE is one of the heaviest interplanetary spacecraft ever launched, with a total mass of around 6,000 kilograms [13,228 pounds], so it took a lot of force and a lot of fuel to achieve this.
In the coming weeks, ESA will analyze JUICE's new orbit before calibrating a second burn to fine-tune the probe's trajectory for the double gravity assist. For small trajectory corrections between now and then, JUICE’s smaller thrusters will be used.
This first burn was a particularly challenging one, as parts of it couldn't be tested in advance. "For example, we only had an estimate for how the liquid in the fuel tanks will move around as the spacecraft accelerates" said Tanco, JUICE Spacecraft Operations Manager. "This is very important to know precisely, because if the fuel behaves different to how we expect, it could cause the spacecraft to drift off course during the burn. So, we are monitoring closely."
Edited by : www.linkedin.com/in/priyanka-v23
コメント