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  • session 8

    Title

    Hitchhiking to the Moon

    Description

    The next few decades involve a dramatically increased interest in lunar exploration for the purpose of developing a permanent human and robotic presence on the Moon, both for science and space exploration objectives. This renewed interest is broad and international, involving space agencies from the USA, Europe, China, India, Japan, Russia, Germany, UK, and others. Recently, ISRO’s Chandrayaan spacecraft offered its platform as an opportunity to fly international instruments to the Moon; NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft provided an opportunity for a secondary payload to the Moon, in the form of the LCROSS lunar impactor mission. In the future, it is expected that there will be more opportunities for ride-sharing or secondary or tertiary payload opportunities to be flown to the Moon. This session provides a forum for the exchange of ideas for such small payloads to be demonstrated at the Moon, by ‘Hitch-hiking a ride’ to the Moon. Examples of such payloads or missions include: micro-spacecraft orbiters, CubeSats, small probes, penetrators, micro-landers, hard-landers, micro-rovers, secondary payload surface science instruments, distributed network landers, and many more. The focus of this session is on mission concepts, technology readiness and ride-sharing requirements.

    Date

    2010-10-01

    Time

    09:00

    Room

    Club H

    IPC members
    • Chairman: Dr. Leon Alkalai, Mandala Space Ventures, United States;

    • Chairman: Prof. Rene Laufer, Luleå University of Technology, Sweden;

    • Rapporteur: Dr. Adam Baker, Rocket Engineering Ltd., United Kingdom;

    papers

    Order

    Time

    Paper title

    Mode

    Presentation status

    Speaker

    Affiliation

    Country

    1

    Accommodating lunar hitchhikers -- lessons learned and prospects

    20

    confirmed

    Dr. James Burke

    The Planetary Society

    United States

    2

    LCROSS LUNAR IMPACTOR - LESSONS LEARNED FROM A SMALL SATELLITE MISSION

    20

    confirmed

    Mr. Daniel Andrews

    National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Ames Research Center

    United States

    3

    Optimal Design of Low-Energy Transfers to Highly Eccentric Frozen Orbits around the Moon

    20

    confirmed

    Dr. Alison Gibbings

    University of Strathclyde

    Germany

    4

    Trajectory optimisation of a very-low-thrust lunar mission subject to highly non-linear thrust constraints

    20

    confirmed

    Dr. Rogan Shimmin

    International Space University (ISU)

    United States

    5

    A Discovery-Class Lunette Mission Concept for a Lunar Geophysical Network

    20

    confirmed

    Mr. John Elliott

    National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Jet Propulsion Laboratory

    United States

    6

    LunaChem--An Instrument to Determine the Chemical Reactivity of Lunar Dust

    20

    confirmed

    Dr. David Loftus

    National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Ames Research Center

    United States

    7

    TIROSS - An Academic Small Satellite Program for Scientific Earth-Moon System Investigations

    20

    confirmed

    Dr. Rene Laufer

    Baylor University

    United States

    8

    Concept for a Lunar Transfer Vehicle for Small Satellite Delivery to the Moon from the International Space Station

    20

    confirmed

    Mr. John Elliott

    National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Jet Propulsion Laboratory

    United States

    9

    Status of the IAA Study Group 4.5 Hitchhiking to the Moon

    20

    Dr. Leon Alkalai

    National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Jet Propulsion Laboratory

    United States