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Post Info TOPIC: Don Quijote


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Title: Measurement requirements for a near-Earth asteroid impact mitigation demonstration mission
Authors: Stephen D. Wolters, Andrew J. Ball, Nigel Wells, Christopher Saunders, Neil McBride

A concept for an Impact Mitigation Preparation Mission, called Don Quijote, is to send two spacecraft to a Near-Earth Asteroid (NEA): an Orbiter and an Impactor. The Impactor collides with the asteroid while the Orbiter measures the resulting change in the asteroid's orbit, by means of a Radio Science Experiment (RSE) carried out before and after impact. Three parallel Phase A studies on Don Quijote were carried out for the European Space Agency: the research presented here reflects outcomes of the study by QinetiQ. We discuss the mission objectives with regards to the prioritisation of payload instruments, with emphasis on the interpretation of the impact. The Radio Science Experiment is described and it is examined how solar radiation pressure may increase the uncertainty in measuring the orbit of the target asteroid. It is determined that to measure the change in orbit accurately a thermal IR spectrometer is mandatory, to measure the Yarkovsky effect. The advantages of having a laser altimeter are discussed. The advantages of a dedicated wide-angle impact camera are discussed and the field-of-view is initially sized through a simple model of the impact.

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Every now and then a space rock hits the world's media sometimes almost literally. Threatening asteroids that zoom past the Earth, fireballs in the sky seen by hundreds of people and mysterious craters which may have been caused by impacting meteorites; all make ESA's planned mission Don Quijote look increasingly timely.
 The uncertainty surrounding whether a meteorite impacted in South America recently highlights the need to know more about these pieces of natural space debris and their trajectories. ESA has always been interested in such endeavours and conducted a number of studies into how it might best help.

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Don Quixote
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Don Quixote is about to ride again in the service of mankind.

A mission into the solar system, named after the famous fictional adventurer, is to crash a spaceship into an asteroid millions of miles from Earth in a Hollywood-style attempt to prove that such a massive body can be deflected off course.
A destructive asteroid heading for the planet is the alarming subject of at least two recent blockbuster films. But the European Space Agency is now planning a £100m mission to create such a Hollywood plot for real.

Space technology companies are being asked to come up with designs for the two Don Quixote craft by the end of the year. One craft, Sancho, the name of the Spaniard's servant, will be launched first to monitor the arrival of Hidalgo, the aristocratic rank which the Don enjoyed.

Hidalgo will then plough into the surface of the asteroid at a speed of 10km a second. The space agency believes the energy caused by the impact will be enough to change the direction of the 500-metre wide asteroid.
Such an asteroid would wipe out an area the size of a large city if, as scientists predict will happen at some time in the future, it were to hit the Earth.
The British space company, EADS Astrium, based in Hertfordshire, has confirmed it will be bidding for the contract.

"Don Quixote is all about preparing for a case in which we really will have to take action. We are trying to find out the simplest way of preventing an asteroid from hitting Earth" - Andres Galvez, head of the ESA's Advance Concepts Team.

Asteroids of varying sizes have previously hit Earth with devastating consequences but, as the global population has grown, the risk to life has been dramatically increased.

Two recent big-budget American disaster movies, Armageddon, starring Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck, and Deep Impact, with Morgan Freeman playing the US president, have focused on attempts to destroy an approaching asteroid and a comet with nuclear bombs planted by astronauts.
In both films, the heroes succeed in saving the planet, but space scientists hope the Don Quixote unmanned missions will render such derring-do unnecessary.
Two asteroids - known as 2002 AT4 and 1989 ML - have been selected as targets for the mission as they will fly into the zone between Earth and Mars, 43 million miles away, after Don Quixote is launched in 2011.

Neither threatens Earth on their current trajectories and mission managers believe that altering their course will present no danger.
Sancho will be sent out first on a journey of at least six months to rendezvous with one of the rocks. It will then go into orbit and deploy probes to examine the asteroid's structure before its sister craft's more dramatic arrival.
Hidalgo will then hurtle in at high-speed and crash straight into the asteroid surface at a predetermined spot.

"The thinking is that the spacecraft will form a crater from which considerable quantities of rocky material will be flung out. As a result, the trajectory of the asteroid will be altered. We believe this size of spacecraft will result in a deviation of a few hundred metres to a kilometre, which given the distances involved over many years will be enough to knock an asteroid off course from the Earth" - Andres Galvez.

After the explosion, Sancho, which will have retired to a safe distance, will move in closer again. Its role will be to study changes in the asteroid's orbit, rotation and structure caused by Hidalgo's impact.

"This is a hugely exciting mission that is now way beyond paper exercises. The idea is to use the huge energy produced by the impact to blast enough material off to give the asteroid a push. This is entirely feasible as the kick the asteroid will get is tiny, but if delivered far enough in advance, will make a big difference to its trajectory many years later" - Professor Colin McInnes, head of the department of mechanical engineering at the University of Strathclyde.

EADS Astrium, the pioneering company which last year launched Inmarsat, the largest commercial satellite ever put into space, plans to produce spacecraft designs by the end of December. ESA experts will then study all the designs put forward and select two. The winner will be chosen in 2007.

"We are going to be heavily involved in the bidding as we want to bring our formidable expertise to the project. It's essential that we know more about the composition of asteroids and whether we can deflect them off target" - Jeremy Close, EADS Astrium spokesman.

In Armageddon, a team led by Bruce Willis succeeds in splitting an asteroid in two so it misses Earth. In Deep Impact, although a small comet crashes into the Atlantic, swamping New York under a tidal wave, a larger one that threatens global destruction is shattered by a nuclear explosion.
Such a scenario began to emerge Last December, when the eyes of the world were on the tsunami disaster in the Indian Ocean, scientists spotted a 400-metre-long asteroid, MN4, apparently on a direct collision course with the Earth with impact forecast for 2029. Later calculations found MN4 would not be a danger in that year, but on present trajectories, a future collision cannot be ruled out.

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Don Quijote
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Based on the recommendations of asteroid experts, ESA has selected asteroids 2002 AT4 and (10302) 1989 ML as mission targets asteroids for its Near-Earth Object deflecting mission, Don Quijote.

Don Quijote is an asteroid-deflecting mission currently under study by ESA’s Advanced Concepts Team (ACT). Earlier this year the NEO Mission Advisory Panel (NEOMAP), consisting of well-known experts in the field, delivered to ESA a target selection report for Europe’s future asteroid mitigation missions, identifying the relevant criteria for selecting a target and picking up two objects that meet most of those criteria.
The asteroids’ temporary designations are 2002 AT4 and 1989 ML.
With this input and the support of ESA’s Concurrent Design Facility (CDF) experts, the Advanced Concepts Team has now completed an extensive assessment of suitable mission architectures, launch strategies, propulsion system options and experiments.
The current scenario envisages two spacecraft in separate interplanetary trajectories. One spacecraft (Hidalgo) will impact an asteroid, the other (Sancho) will arrive earlier at the target asteroid, rendezvous and orbit the asteroid for several months, observing it before and after the impact to detect any changes in its orbit.
Industrial studies are now about to start; it will be down to European experts to propose alternative solutions for the design of the low-cost NEO precursor mission. This will be the first step towards the development of a means to tackle asteroid impacts – one of the few natural disasters that our technology can prevent.



While the eyes of the world were on the Asian tsunami last Christmas, one group of scientists were watching uneasily for another potential natural disaster – the threat of an asteroid impact.
On 19 December 2004 MN4, an asteroid of about 400 m, lost since its discovery six months earlier, was observed again and its orbit was computed. It immediately became clear that the chances that it could hit the Earth during a close encounter in 2029 were unusually high. As the days passed the probability did not decrease and the asteroid became notorious for surpassing all previous records in the Torino and Palermo impact risk scales - scales that measure the risk of an asteroid impact just as the Richter scale quantifies the size of an earthquake.
Only after earlier observations of the object were found and a more accurate trajectory was computed did it become clear that it would not impact the Earth – at least not in 2029. Impacts on later dates, though unlikely, have not been totally ruled out. It is extremely difficult to tell what will happen unless we come up with a better way to track this or other NEOs and if necessary take steps to tackle them.
Most world experts agree that this capability is now within our reach. A mission like ESA’s Don Quijote could provide a means to assess a threatening NEO and take concrete steps to deflect it away from the Earth.
But every good performance needs rehearsing and in order to be ready for such a threat, we should try our hardware on a harmless asteroid first. Don Quijote would be the first mission to make such an attempt. The big question was: which asteroid and what should it be like?
The NEO population contains a confusing variety of objects, and deciding which physical parameters are most relevant for mitigation considerations is no trivial task. But the NEOMAP experts took on the challenge and in February 2005 provided ESA with their recommendations on the asteroid selection criteria for ESA’s deflection rehearsal.
People might wonder whether performing a deflection test, such as that planned for Don Quijote, represents any risk to our planet. What if things go wrong? Could we create a problem, rather than learn how to avoid one?
Experts world-wide say the answer is no. Even a very dramatic impact of a heavy spacecraft on a small asteroid would only result in a minuscule modification of the object’s orbit. In fact the change would be so small that the Don Quijote mission requires two spacecraft – one to monitor the impact of the other. The second spacecraft measures the subtle variation of the object’s orbital parameters that would not be noticeable from Earth.
Target objects can also be selected so that all possible concerns are avoided altogether, by looking into the way the distance between the asteroid’s and the Earth’s orbits changes with time. If the target asteroid is not an ‘Earth crosser’, as is the case with NEOs in the ‘Amor’ class (which have orbits with perihelion distance well in excess of 1 AU), testing a deflection manoeuvre represents no risk to the Earth.

Other considerations related to the orbit of the target asteroid are also important, especially the change of orbital velocity that is required by the spacecraft to ‘catch up’ with the target asteroid – the so-called ‘delta V’. This should be sufficiently small to minimise the required amount of spacecraft propellant and enable the use of cheaper launchers, but high enough to allow the same spacecraft to be used with a number of possible targets.
Navigation and deflection measurements requirements set some heavy constraints on the target selection. The shape, density, and size are all important factors, but are often poorly known. A spacecraft orbiting an asteroid needs to know about the object’s gravitational field in order to navigate. The ‘impactor spacecraft’ must know the position of the centre of mass to define the point it is aiming for.

Asteroids come in all sort of flavours, but as far as composition is concerned two main types dominate.
Our still rudimentary knowledge of the abundance of asteroids of different types in the near-Earth asteroid population indicates that the next hazardous asteroid is more likely to be a ‘C-type’, than an ‘S-type’. C-types have dark surfaces with a carbonaceous spectral signature, while S-types have brighter surfaces, their spectra matching closely that of silicates.
The surface properties of the target asteroid -and in particular the percentage of light that it reflects - are a critical factor in the final phase of the impactor spacecraft navigation. The brighter it looks the easier it is to aim at. However for a rehearsal the target should not be too easy.

ESA has selected asteroids 2002 AT4 and (10302) 1989 ML as mission targets because they represent best compromise among all the (sometimes conflicting) selection criteria. A decision on which of the two will become the final destination of both Sancho and Hidalgo spacecraft will be made in 2007.
The phase of internal studies on the Don Quijote mission is now over, and it is time for the space industry to suggest suitable design solutions. ESA has made an open invitation to European space companies to submit proposals on possible designs. The selection of the most promising ones will take place towards the end of the year. In early 2006, two teams should start working on their interpretations of this technology demonstration mission. A year later, once the results are available, ESA will select the final design to be implemented, and then Don Quijote will be ready to take on an asteroid!

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