5 research outputs found

    Lucy: Navigating a Jupiter Trojan Tour

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    In January 2017, NASA selected the Lucy mission to explore six Jupiter Trojan asteroids. These six bodies, remnants of the primordial material that formed the outer planets, were captured in the Sun-Jupiter L4 and L5 Lagrangian regions early in the solar system formation. These particular bodies were chosen because of their diverse spectral properties and the chance to observe up close for the first time two orbiting approximately equal mass binaries, Patroclus and Menoetius. KinetX, Inc. is the primary navigation supplier for the Lucy mission. This paper describes preliminary navigation analyses of the approach phase for each Trojan encounter

    Refining Lucy Mission Delta-V During Spacecraft Design Using Trajectory Optimization Within High-Fidelity Monte Carlo Maneuver Analysis

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    Recent advances linking medium-fidelity trajectory optimization and high-fidelity trajectory propagation/maneuver design software with Monte Carlo maneuver analysis and parallel processing enabled realistic statistical delta-V estimation well before launch. Completing this high-confidence, refined statistical maneuver analysis early enabled release of excess delta-V margin for increased dry mass margin for the Lucy Jupiter Trojan flyby mission. By 3.3 years before launch, 16 of 34 TCMs had 1000 re-optimized trajectory design samples, yielding tens of m/s lower 99%-probability delta-V versus targeting maneuvers to one optimal trajectory. One year later, 1000 re-optimized samples of all deterministic maneuvers and subsequent flybys further lowered estimated delta-V

    Optimization of the Lucy Interplanetary Trajectory via Two-Point Direct Shooting

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    Lucy is NASAs next Discovery-class mission and will explore the Trojan asteroids in the Sun-Jupiter L4 and L5 regions. This paper details the design of Lucys interplanetary trajectory using a two-point direct shooting transcription, nonlinear programming, and monotonic basin hopping. These techniques are implemented in the Evolutionary Mission Trajectory Generator (EMTG), a trajectory optimization tool developed at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. We present applications to the baseline trajectory design, Monte Carlo analysis, and operations

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