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Athena (asteroid spacecraft)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Proposed Pallas flyby probe
Not to be confused withAthena (rocket family),Advanced Telescope for High Energy Astrophysics, orAthena-Fidus.
For the 2025 lunar landing mission, seeIM-2.

Athena
Mission typeAsteroid flyby
OperatorNASA
Mission duration2 years (planned)
Spacecraft properties
Launch mass≈ 182 kg (401 lb)
Start of mission
Launch date2022 (proposed)
Flyby of2 Pallas
Anultraviolet image of Pallas showing its spherical shape, taken by theHubble Space Telescope in 2007.

Athena was a proposed space mission that would have performed a single flyby of asteroid2 Pallas, the third largest asteroid in theSolar System.[1]

IfAthena had been funded, it was planned to share the launch vehicle with thePsyche andJanus spacecraft and fly its own trajectory for a Marsgravity assist to slingshot into theasteroid belt. It would have taken about two years to reach Pallas.[1] The mission'sprincipal investigator was Joseph O'Rourke, atArizona State University.

TheAthena spacecraft was examined in Category 1 of the 2018 NASASIMPLEx competition and was eliminated before reaching Category 2; it will possibly be proposed at a later unknown time.[2] TheAthena mission was beaten by other mission concepts such as theTransOrbital TrailBlazer lunar orbiter.[3]

Objectives

[edit]

The science goals and objectives included:[4]

  • to determine how differentiation varies on bodies with large proportions of ices and how they evolved over time.
  • to determine how the current population of asteroids evolved in time and space.
  • to understand the role of water in the evolution of Pallas.
  • to constrain the dynamical evolution of Pallas and asteroids in the Pallas impact family.

Athena would have conducted visible imaging of the geology of Pallas with a miniature color (RGB) camera. Also, a radio science experiment would have used a continuous antenna pointing to Earth for two-way Doppler tracking to enable the determination of the mass of Pallas with a precision of <0.05%.[4]

References

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  1. ^abDorminey, Bruce (10 March 2019)."Proposed NASA SmallSat Mission Could Be First To Visit Pallas, Our Third Largest Asteroid".Forbes. Retrieved10 March 2019.
  2. ^"Athena: A SmallSat Mission to (2) Pallas". Archived fromthe original on 21 November 2021. Retrieved5 December 2020.
  3. ^Finalists Selected for NASA’s SIMPLEx Program 24 June 2019
  4. ^abAthena: the first-ever encounter of (2) Pallas with a Smallsat. J. G. O'Rourke, J. Castillo-Rogez, L. T. Elkins-Tanton, R. R. Fu, T. N. Harrison, S. Marchi, R. Park, B. E. Schmidt, D. A. Williams, C. C. Seybold, R. N. Schindhelm, J. D. Weinberg. 50th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference 2019 (LPI Contrib. No. 2132)
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