Abstract
AbstractThe Lucy mission is NASA’s 13th Discovery-class mission and the first mission to the Trojan asteroids. The spacecraft conducts flybys of 8 Trojan asteroids over the course of 12 years. A series of 3 Earth Gravity Assists are used to increase the aphelion of the spacecraft’s orbit and to target the final Trojan asteroid flyby. Over the course of 2 years the spacecraft conducts 4 flybys in the L4 swarm to explore 6 Trojan asteroids, which includes two small satellites. Near the end of the mission, Lucy flies past the near-equal size binary, Patroclus-Menoetius, in the L5 swarm. The concept of operations for the Trojan flybys invokes a standard timeline for spacecraft operations to allow a science sequence that is tailored to each Trojan asteroid. The concept of operations enables efficiency of observations and resiliency in the observing sequence to robustly meet the Lucy science requirements.
Funder
Marshall Space Flight Center
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC