Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing...

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Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky

Transcript of Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing...

Page 1: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Hayabusa Mission UpdateMike Zolensky

Page 2: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Capsule Main Component

Cross Chute

Parachute CoverAblator

Forebody Heatshield

(404)~350

(220)

~200

•After-Landing Mass (Main Component only): 6.3 kg• Re-entry Mass (all the four components): 16.8 kg

(mm)

Capsule Main Component Cross Section

Main Component Forebody HeatshieldParachute-cover

Page 3: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

0

10

20

30

40

50

800 850 900 950 1000

Alti

tude

[km

]

DownRange[km]

Triggering Failure

SuccessfulTriggering

Woomera Prohibited Area

F-ABL Parachute Cover Main Component

Wind Vector

Parachute Separation

Parachute

7.3 kg 2.2 kg 6kg 1kg

15-20 km

Landing Locations of Each Component

Page 4: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center
Page 5: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center
Page 6: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center
Page 7: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Inside “JAXA Mission Control” at Woomera

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 8: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center of this ellipse

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 9: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Hayabusa re-entryJune 13, ~midnight

Page 10: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Two Indigenous People who were taken to the recovery site first, in order to determine whether any cultural precautions had to be taken at the site

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 11: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Aerial view of the landing site of the Hayabusa Instrument Package

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Instrument Package

Recovery Party assembly site

Page 12: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Hayabusa Instrument Package as found – it apparently landed and turned over as the parachute caught against a bush

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 13: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Technicians approach the Hayabusa Instrument Package to cut battery wires

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 14: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Heat-sealing the Hayabusa Instrument Package into a temporary transport bag

Photos by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 15: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Hayabusa Instrument Package after up-turning

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 16: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Dr. Hajime Yano (left) (Recovery Lead and former PostDoc at JSC), Mike Zolensky (center), Australian Quarantine Lead at far right

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 17: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Packing the Hayabusa Instrument Package into its transport case –inflating cushions, Dr. Kuninaka at right

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 18: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Gathering up the parachute

Photos by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 19: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Delivery of the Hayabusa Instrument Package leaving the field

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 20: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Delivery of the Hayabusa Instrument Package at the Woomera Ops Center

Photo by Scott Sandford, NASA ARC

Page 21: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Hajime Yano with Hayabusa Instrument Package as received from the field

Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC

Page 22: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Photo by Mike Zolensky (taken in 2009)

Sample cabinet in Hayabusa Curation Lab. Blue arrow indicates vacuum chamber, red arrow indicates N2-flooded chamber

Page 23: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Tomoki Nakamura opening the Hayabusa Instrument Package in the Hayabusa Curation Lab

Photo by JAXA

Page 24: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

View into the top chamber of the Hayabusa Instrument Package Sample Catcher

The grains that can be seen are still of uncertain origin

Photo by JAXA

Page 25: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

The first grain being removed from the Sample Catcher, on the end of a quartz glass fiber. The Grain is arrowed.

Photo by JAXA

Page 26: Hayabusa Mission Update Mike Zolensky...Photo by Mike Zolensky, NASA JSC. Final calculated landing ellipse measured ~100 km by 15 km, the actual landing site was very near the center

Hayabusa PET Plan

• Grains are currently being removed from the Sample Catcher

• These will first be analyzed by IR spectrometry and SEM/EDX in the Hayabusa Curation Lab

• Likely asteroid grains will then be analyzed elsewhere in Japan by a dedicated team for the next ~10 months

• Following PET samples will be made available to scientists worldwide, and 10% of the sample will come to NASA by agreement