[meteorite-list] Rosetta: Four Done, Six To Go - Burning Down to Comet Rendezvous

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 1 Jul 2014 13:14:55 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <201407012014.s61KEtxj015235_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2014/07/01/four-complete-six-to-go-burning-down-to-comet-rendezvous/

Rosetta
Four done, six to go: Burning down to comet rendezvous
European Space Agency
July 1, 2014

It's burn week in space again, and Wednesday, 2 July, marks the start of
a fresh set of four orbit correction manoeuvres (OCMs), referred to as
the "Far Approach Trajectory" burns. These will be somewhat smaller than
those previous but will be conducted weekly, rather than fortnightly.

First, a quick recap to bring you up to date.

On 7 May, Rosetta began a series of ten OCMs designed to reduce its
speed with respect to comet 67P/C-G by about 775 m/s. The first,
producing just 20 m/s delta-v ("change in velocity"), was done as a
small test burn, as it was the first use of the spacecraft's propulsion
system after waking from hibernation on 20 January. The system worked fine!

The following three, referred to by the Rosetta mission team as the
"Near Comet Drift" (NCD) set (and nicknamed here in the blog as "The Big
Burns"), took place every two weeks starting 21 May. These three also
ran beautifully and delivered 289.6, 269.5 and 88.7 m/s in delta-v,
respectively. They were, in terms of run time, some of the longest
manoeuvres ever conducted by an ESA spacecraft.

Thus the first four burns have already delivered 667.8 of the roughly
775 m/s needed to slow down to a relative velocity smaller than 1 m/s
when we meet the comet on 6 August.

"The OCMs conducted so far have delivered more or less the exact amount
of delta-v needed; we've seen small over-performances of less than a
percent, meaning that no replanning of subsequent OCMs has - so far -
been necessary," says Sylvain Lodiot, Rosetta Spacecraft Operations
Manager (see table below).

Another aspect of the burns to date is the fact that, if a burn did not
take place as planned (due to any sort of glitch on board Rosetta or on
the ground), the team had a week (or more) in which to correct the
problem and re-do the burn - tight, but doable in terms of technology
and team-planning workload.

This is about to change.

Four Fatties

The next four burns are designated as the "Far Approach Trajectory"
(FAT) manoeuvres, and since your blog editors can't think of any better
nickname (and despite them being much smaller than the three Big Burns),
we'll just call them the "Four Fatties".

Fatty1 gets underway on 2 July at 14:05:57 CEST (12:05:57 UTC), should
run for 1 hr:33mins:13secs and is set to deliver a delta-v of 58.7 m/s
(the next three, on 9, 16 and 23 July, are planned for 25.8, 11.0 and
4.8 m/s, respectively).

(The Four Fatties will be followed by two final CAT for Close Approach
Trajectory - burns, for the total of 10 OCMs; details on these later.)

But while the required delta-v's are getting smaller, so, too, are the
reaction times available to the Rosetta team if anything goes wrong with
a burn.

"The next four FAT burns, in particular, are critical," says Sylvain.

If any one burn is delayed, we will have a window of just a few days in
which to react, fix whatever caused the problem, replan the burn - which
would invariably require even more fuel - and then carry it out."

It goes without saying that handling any such replanned burn would
require team work and expertise of the highest calibre.

But this is all theoretical for now; today Rosetta is working nominally
and no one expects problems with the propulsion system for the Four Fatties.

The rest of the spacecraft's systems - including power, thermal,
attitude and orbit control, data handling and communications - are
operating as expected.

Working behind the scenes: Flight dynamics

It's worth mentioning the numerous teams - "teams of teams" - working
behind the scenes to ensure Rosetta gets to 67P/C-G. These include the
Flight Dynamics experts, who are responsible, in general terms, for
determining where Rosetta (and the comet) are and what attitude the
spacecraft is in at any given moment.

Among other activities, the team are working on developing several
mathematical models of comet 67P/C-G that can model and predict the
gravity potential, the physical shape and rotation/spin, and the coma -
the latter to predict how the comet's outgassing will affect Rosetta's
orbits and Philae's approach.

"We need a good coma model that tells us the density and velocity of
particles being emitted from the comet," says Frank Budnik, a flight
dynamics specialists at ESOC.

"We expect the spacecraft to be affected by the coma on top of the comet
body's gravitational pull, and these all play into calculating the
orbits and the thruster burns required to keep Rosetta near the comet."

 

ROSETTA OCM PLAN MAY-AUG 2014
Update as of 1 Jul

Date Delta-V m/s Dur. (mins) Comment
7 May 20 41 Complete
21 May 290 441 Complete
4 Jun 270 406 Complete
18 Jun 91 140 Complete 5% over-performance
2 Jul 59 94
9 Jul 26 46
16 Jul 11 26
23 Jul 5 17
3 Aug 3 13
6 Aug 1 very brief
Received on Tue 01 Jul 2014 04:14:55 PM PDT


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