[meteorite-list] LADEE Leaves Earth's Orbit

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Wed Oct 2 19:09:56 EDT 2013



http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/10021120-ladee-has-finally-left-earth.html

LADEE has finally left Earth
Emily Lakdawalla
Planetary Society Blog
October 2, 2013

When LADEE launched on September 6, it launched into Earth orbit. Today, 
it is finally on a path that will take it to its October 6 lunar orbit 
insertion. A direct-to-the-Moon trajectory would have been faster, but 
it would have required much more fuel and a larger launch vehicle.

I've been wondering about the status of LADEE and Lunar Reconnaissance 
Orbiter -- two missions not managed by JPL or APL -- in the face of the 
shutdown. I have finally been pointed to a great source of information 
on LADEE's status, thanks to a comment left on my blog entry by Mike Loucks 
yesterday: "LADEE is being operated by essential personnel at NASA/Ames. 
TCM-1 was executed Tuesday afternoon as planned, as will be the Lunar 
Orbit Insertion Burns that start on Sunday." In a series of posts on their 
blog "The Astrogator's Guild," spacecraft navigators Mike Loucks and John 
Carrico, Jr. have been explaining LADEE's circuitous path to the Moon.

First, a quick reminder on some basic orbital mechanics. With a spacecraft 
in an elliptical orbit, it is sometimes very far from the planet and sometimes 
very close to it. The far point is the orbital apoapsis, and the close 
point is the periapsis. When a spacecraft is orbiting Earth, these points 
are usually referred to as apogee and perigee. Another thing about elliptical 
orbits: spacecraft are moving much faster when they are near periapsis 
than when near apoapsis. So a spacecraft on an elliptical orbit spends 
much more of its time far away from the planet, near apoapsis, than it 
spends close to the planet, near periapsis.

Here is what LADEE's initial orbit looked like on the morning of September 
11, 2013. The green path had already been traveled by the spacecraft (green 
circle); it had passed through apoapsis and was returning toward Earth. 
The dotted lines show the spacecraft's future path.

[Graphic]
LADEE's orbit on September 11, 2013

As explained further on their blog, LADEE performed two Perigee Maneuvers 
on September 13 and 21, firing its main engine to increase its speed as 
it passed through perigee. This has the effect of raising the height of 
the orbit's apogee. The second Perigee Maneuver gave LADEE the orbital 
height needed to reach the Moon, but the Moon wasn't there at the time 
that it arrived at its next apogee. LADEE returned on a last Earthward 
loop, reaching its final perigee yesterday at 11:00 UTC. It is now on 
the way to the Moon, which will be at the right spot in its orbit this 
time for LADEE to rendezvous with it.

Navigators commanded one final trajectory correction maneuver to fine-tune 
the course toward lunar orbit insertion on October 6 at 10:57 UTC. According 
to a tweet from John, that maneuver "looks good," so all is well for LADEE's 
lunar arrival.

What's next? Here's the summary, from a September 27 blog entry.

LOI-1 is designed to place the spacecraft into a 24 hr orbit, with a periselene 
altitude of 750 km.  After 3 revolutions in this orbit, 3rd-body Earth 
gravitational perturbations will have lowered periselene to an altitude 
of 250 km (by design).  At this point, LOI-2 will be performed on 9 Oct 
2013 10:37 UTC ( to place LADEE into a 4 hr orbit (also with a 250 km 
periselene altitude).  LADEE will spend 3 days in this orbit until LOI-3 
(12 Oct 2013 10:37 UTC), which circularizes the orbit at 250 km.  LADEE 
will spend 30 days in this "commissioning orbit", and will also perform 
tests using the laser communications experiment (LLCD). The timing and 
magnitudes of the maneuvers leading to the commissioning orbit are given 
below.

Executed Maneuvers:
	• AM1 11 Sep 2013 23:00:00.000 9.34 m/sec
	• PM1 13 Sep 2013 16:36:08.000 16.96 m/sec
	• PM2 21 Sep 2013 11:53:19.000 17.492 m/sec

Planned Maneuvers
	• TCM1 01 Oct 2013 22:00:00.000 0.9 m/sec [now completed]
	• LOI1 06 Oct 2013 10:57:00.210 329.86 m/sec
	• LAM1 07 Oct 2013 22:51:32.205 0 m/sec (error corrections for LOI-1)
	• LOI2 09 Oct 2013 10:37:55.651 295.99 m/sec
	• LOI3 12 Oct 2013 10:37:34.993 238.56 m/sec

[Graphic] 
LADEE's orbit on September 28, 2013

Go LADEE! And I hope that by the time you reach the Moon, this stupid 
shutdown will be over and scientists employed at NASA centers can get 
on with the science!!

Regarding Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter: I don't have an awesome blog like 
the Astrogator's Guild to point you to for that one, but I have contacted 
several folks at Arizona State University, where they operate the Lunar 
Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC), and I've been told that business 
is as usual for them. Just like the University of Arizona's HiRISE operations 
center, which released an awesome image of comet ISON captured from Mars 
today, LROC prepares and posts its own image releases without NASA headquarters 
being in the editorial loop, so they are continuing to post Moon images 
through the shutdown. As is, by the way, MESSENGER from Mercury.





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