Orbit transfers for Dawn’s Ceres operations: Navigation and mission design experience at a dwarf planet

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Abstract

Dawn, a mission belonging to NASA’s Discovery Program, was launched on September 27, 2007 to explore two objects in the main asteroid belt in order to yield insights into important questions about the formation and evolution of the solar system. Successfully completing all mission objectives at Vesta, Dawn arrived at dwarf planet Ceres in March 2015 and continued its journey to a series of four near circular polar science orbits. Dawn became the first mission to orbit around two extraterrestrial targets; such a mission would have been impossible without the low thrust ion propulsion system (IPS). Maneuvering a spacecraft using only the IPS for the transfers between the mapping orbits posed many technical challenges to Dawn’s flight team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Failure of the second reaction wheel assembly, shortly before leaving Vesta, added another challenge for Dawn’s flight team. This paper discusses the mission design and navigational experience and challenges during Dawn’s Ceres operations.

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APA

Han, D., Smith, J., Kennedy, B., Mastrodemos, N., & Whiffen, G. (2016). Orbit transfers for Dawn’s Ceres operations: Navigation and mission design experience at a dwarf planet. In 14th International Conference on Space Operations, 2016. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Inc, AIAA. https://doi.org/10.2514/6.2016-2427

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