ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::All

2002 News Releases

Author : Lynn Bode

A "freeway" through the solar system resembling a vast array of virtual winding tunnels and conduits around the Sun and planets, as envisioned by an engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., can slash the amount of fuel needed for future space missions.

Called the Interplanetary Superhighway, the system was conceived by Martin Lo, whose software was used to help design the flight path for NASA's Genesis mission, which is currently using this "freeway in space" on its mission to collect solar wind particles for return to Earth.

Most missions are designed to take advantage of the way gravity pulls on a spacecraft when it swings by a body such as a planet or moon. Lo's concept takes advantage of another factor, the Sun's pull on the planets or a planet's pull on its nearby moons. Forces from many directions nearly cancel each other out, leaving paths through the gravity fields in which spacecraft can travel.

Each planet and moon has five locations in space called Lagrange points, where one body's gravity balances another's. Spacecraft can orbit there while burning very little fuel. To find the Interplanetary Superhighway, Lo mapped some possible flight paths among the Lagrange points, varying the distance the spacecraft would go and how fast or slow it would travel. Like threads twisted together to form a rope, the possible flight paths formed tubes in space. Lo plans to map out these tubes for the whole solar system.

Lo's research is based on theoretical work begun in the late nineteenth century by the French mathematician Henri Poincaré. In 1978, NASA's International Sun-Earth Explorer 3 was the first mission to use low energy orbits around a Lagrange point. Later, using low energy paths between Earth and the Moon, controllers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., sent the spacecraft to the first encounter with a comet, Comet Giacobini-Zinner, in 1985.

In 1991, another method of analyzing low energy orbits was used by engineers from JPL and the Japanese Space Agency to enable the Japanese Hiten mission to reach the Moon. Inspired by this pioneering work and research conducted by scientists at the University of Barcelona, Lo conceived the theory of the Interplanetary Superhighway.

Lo and his colleagues have turned the underlying mathematics of the Interplanetary Superhighway into a tool for mission design called "LTool," using models and algorithms developed at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind. The new LTool was used by JPL engineers to redesign the flight path for the Genesis mission to adapt to a change in launch dates. Genesis launched in August 2001.

The flight path was designed for the spacecraft to leave Earth and travel to orbit the Lagrange point. After five loops around this Lagrange point, the spacecraft will fall out of orbit without any maneuvers and then pass by Earth to a Lagrange point on the opposite side of the planet. Finally, it will return to Earth's upper atmosphere to drop off its samples of solar wind in the Utah desert.

"Genesis wouldn't need to use any fuel at all in a perfect world," Lo said. "But since we can't control the many variables that occur throughout the mission, we have to make some corrections as Genesis completes its loops around a Lagrange point of Earth. The savings on the fuel translates into a better and cheaper mission."

Lo added, "This concept does not guarantee easy access to every part of the solar system. However, I can envision a place where we might construct and service science platforms around one of the Moon's Lagrange points. Since Lagrange points are landmarks for the Interplanetary Superhighway, we might be able to shunt spacecraft to and from such platforms." A team at NASA's Johnson Space Center, Houston, working with the NASA Exploration Team, proposes to someday use the Interplanetary Superhighway for future human space missions.

"Lo's work has led to breakthroughs in simplifying mission concepts for human and robotic exploration beyond low-Earth orbit," said Doug Cooke, manager of Johnson's Advanced Development Office. "These simplifications result in fewer space vehicles needed for a broad range of mission options."

The work on the Interplanetary Superhighway for space mission design was nominated for a Discover Innovation Award by Discover magazine editors and an outside panel of experts.

JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. For more information on the Genesis mission, visit the Internet at: http://www.genesismission.org/.





About the author:



Press Release







Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Barcelona - City of Amazing Architecture
  2. Gourmet French Dining in Los Cabos - The French Riveria Restaurant
  3. How You Can Afford That Long Holiday
  4. Van Camping
  5. Travel Tips
  6. The Luxury Of Traveling With Yacht Charter Companies
  7. Paris hotels: How to reduce your risk of being disappointed
  8. Finding Cheap Airfare Online
  9. Low Airfares
  10. Cigars: Smoking Your Cigar
  11. Cigars: Quality Control
  12. Cigars: Cigar Manufacture
  13. Cigars: Some Producing Countries
  14. Cigars: The Binder & The Filler
  15. Cigars: Processing Tobacco
  16. Cigars: Curing Tobacco
  17. Cigars: Growing Tobacco Part 2
  18. Cigars: The Tobacco Plant
  19. Cigars: Tobacco Growing
  20. Cigars: The Cigar Wrapper
  21. Hotels
  22. Desert Inn Makes Room For "Encore at Wynn Las Vegas"
  23. Travel Europe – How to Travel Europe on a Cheap Budget
  24. Online Travel Statistics
  25. Discover Your Back Yard
More related feeds
Bush requested oversight multiple times prior to collapse
While a prompt letter does not necessarily force agency action, it alerts agencies of issues OMB considers a priority." OMB news released, 05/29/2002 2002 News Releases There's more but I've got to post this before I lose it.

Labour's broken promise No 9 on law and order
Labour has failed to produce a credible plan to combat crime, despite promising one since the 2002 election, says National's Justice & Corrections spokesman, Simon Power.

Feature: War on Marijuana Failing Despite Drug Czar's Happy Talk ...
The stability -- not reduction -- in marijuana use comes despite at least 127 different anti-marijuana TV, radio, and print ads by ONDCP, in addition to at least 34 press releases focused mainly on marijuana and at least 50 reports from ...

750000 lost jobs? The dodgy digits behind the war on piracy
Customs is most often given as the source for this, and indeed, you can find press releases from as recently as 2002 giving that figure as a US Customs and Border Patrol estimate. Eureka! But when we contacted CBP to determine how they ...

Gordon Smith's Party Is Over
[Grams Press Release, 4/1/98; Vote 77, 4/2/98]. Smith Wished “Everyone” Had a Private Account for Social Security. “I am not ideologically opposed to personal savings accounts. I wish everyone had one,” Smith said in 2005. [Gannett News ...

Noteworthy in the News: Meet Me, New Releases, Big Names & a New ...
O2 Sparkling Vodka would like to get the word out about the uniqueness of their vodka. New sparkling vodkas may emerge on the market, but O2 Sparkling Vodka has been a top seller in Europe since 2002. According to the press release they ...

Piracy Statistics and the Importance of Journalistic Skepticism
For example, I contacted Thomas Sydnor, the author of the paper I linked above, and he was able to point me to a 2002 press release from the FBI, which claims that "losses to counterfeiting are estimated at $200-250 billion a year in US ...

HRW losing its way
In a press release about the report, HRW's Americas director, Jose Miguel Vivanco stated that "rather than advancing rights protections" the Chavez government has "moved in the opposite direction, sacrificing basic guarantees in pursuit ...

LP bait ban/NRC meeting: Press Release
Humphries’ order, as prescribed by the state’s CWD emergency response plan adopted in 2002, would have expired Feb. 26, 2009, but the NRC action removes the expiration date and makes the ban permanent. Additionally, the NRC approved ...

India's growing clean technology economy attracts investors and ...
Source: Press release distribution via India PRwire. Cleantech Group LLC. Accelerating the next wave of innovation®. Stresses in the global economy are being compounded by repercussions from climate change, scarcity of food, ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved