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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Spacecraft  



1.1  Design and construction  





1.2  Spacecraft subsystems  



1.2.1  Power  





1.2.2  Communications and data  





1.2.3  Propulsion and guidance  







1.3  Scientific payload  







2 Mission  





3 Investigation into failure  





4 Proposed reflight  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














CONTOUR






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


CONTOUR

A spacecraft approaches the coma of a comet, while another comet is visible in the background.
Artist impression of CONTOUR approaching a comet.

Mission type

Flyby (2P/Encke · 73P/Schwassmann–Wachmann · 6P/d'Arrest)

Operator

NASA · Applied Physics Laboratory

COSPAR ID

2002-034A Edit this at Wikidata

SATCAT no.

27457Edit this on Wikidata

Mission duration

1 month, 12 days

Spacecraft properties

Launch mass

328 kg (723 lb)

Start of mission

Launch date

July 3, 2002 (2002-07-03) 06:47:41 UTC
(22 years and 10 days ago)

Rocket

Delta II

Launch site

Cape Canaveral SLC-17

Contractor

Boeing

End of mission

Last contact

August 15, 2002 (2002-08-15)
(21 years, 10 months and 28 days ago)

Discovery program
← Genesis
MESSENGER →
 

The Comet Nucleus Tour (CONTOUR) was a NASA Discovery-class space probe that failed shortly after its July 2002 launch. It was the only Discovery mission to fail.

The two comets scheduled to be visited were Encke and Schwassmann-Wachmann-3, and the third target was d'Arrest. It was hoped that a new comet would have been discovered in the inner Solar System between 2006 and 2008, in which case the spacecraft trajectory would have been changed if possible to rendezvous with the new comet. Scientific objectives included imaging the nuclei at resolutions of up to 4 meters (13 ft), performing spectral mapping of the nuclei at resolutions of up to 100 meters (330 ft), and obtaining detailed compositional data on gas and dust in the near-nucleus environment, with the goal of improving knowledge of the characteristics of comet nuclei.

After the solid rocket motor intended to inject the spacecraft into solar orbit was ignited on August 15, 2002, contact with the probe could not be re-established. Ground-based telescopes later found three objects along the course of the satellite, leading to the speculation that it had disintegrated. Attempts to contact the probe were ended on December 20, 2002. The probe thus accomplished none of its primary scientific objectives, but did prove some spaceflight technologies, such as the APL-developed non-coherent Doppler tracking spacecraft navigation technique, which was later used on the New Horizons spacecraft.[1][2]

Spacecraft[edit]

The CONTOUR spacecraft at the Kennedy Space Center in May 2002, being prepared for launch.

Design and construction[edit]

The CONTOUR spacecraft was constructed in-house at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. CONTOUR was shaped as an octagonal prism, measuring at 2.1 metres (6.9 ft) tall and 1.8 metres (5.9 ft) long, had a total fueled mass of 398 kg (877 lb) at launch, not including the 377 kg (831 lb) mass of the Star 30 booster it was attached to, during the launch phase of the mission.[3] The spacecraft was fitted with a 25 cm (9.8 in) whipple shield, similar to the one used on Stardust, on its leading face, designed with four layers of nextel fabric and seven layers of kevlar.[4][5] The shield was built to allow the spacecraft to withstand the respective 28.2 and 14 km/s velocity flybys of comets Encke and Schwassmann-Wachmann-3, where the spacecraft would be subjected to numerous particles ejecting from the nuclei of the comets.[6] Although mission scientists predicted that the spacecraft would take no significant damage during the Encke and Schwassmann-Wachmann-3 encounters, the shield and its prototypes were tested vigorously during the construction of the spacecraft, including one where a shield prototype was shot at with surrogate nylon particles from a two stage light-gas gun. The results of the earlier tests allowed mission planners to determine a safe distance from which the CONTOUR would pass by comets targeted on the mission.[6] Three of the four scientific instruments aboard the spacecraft were embedded within this shield.[4]

Spacecraft subsystems[edit]

Power[edit]

Power for CONTOUR derives from solar cells, which are mounted onto the spacecraft, decorating the sides and rear and generating up to 670 watts of power. A nickel–cadmium battery designed to last up to nine ampere hours was also installed aboard the spacecraft in the event that the solar cell system fails, or does not provide enough power for the spacecraft or its instruments to function.[4]

Communications and data[edit]

Propulsion and guidance[edit]

Scientific payload[edit]

The Comet Impact Dust Analyzer (CIDA)
The CONTOUR Remote Imager/Spectrograph (CRISP)
The CONTOUR Aft Imager (CAI), also known as the CONTOUR Forward Imager (CFI)
Neutral Gas Ion Mass Spectrometer (NGIMS)

Mission[edit]

Long-exposure photograph of the launch of CONTOUR from Cape Canaveral on July 3, 2002.

CONTOUR launched on a Delta 7425 (aDelta II Lite launch vehicle with four strap-on solid-rocket boosters and a Star 27 third stage) on July 3, 2002, at 6:47:41 UT (2:47:41 a.m. EDT) from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. It was launched into a high-apogee Earth orbit with a period of 5.5 days. Following a series of phasing orbits, the Star 30 solid rocket motor was used to perform an injection maneuver on August 15, 2002, to put CONTOUR in the proper trajectory for an Earth flyby on August 15, 2003, followed by an encounter with comet Encke on November 12, 2003, at a distance of 100 to 160 km and a flyby speed of 28.2 km/s, 1.07 AU from the Sun and 0.27 AU from Earth. During the August 2002 injection maneuver, the probe was lost.

Three more Earth flybys would have followed, on August 14, 2004, February 10, 2005, and February 10, 2006. On June 18, 2006, CONTOUR would have encountered comet Schwassmann-Wachmann-3 at 14 km/s, 0.95 AU from the Sun and 0.33 AU from Earth. Two more Earth flybys were scheduled in February 2007 and 2008, and a flyby of comet d'Arrest might have occurred on 16 August 2008 at a relative velocity of 11.8 km/s, 1.35 AU from the Sun and 0.36 AU from Earth. All flybys would have had a closest encounter distance of about 100 km and would have occurred near the period of maximum activity for each comet. After the comet Encke encounter, CONTOUR might have been retargeted towards a new comet if one was discovered with the desired characteristics (e.g. active, brighter than absolute magnitude 10, perihelion within 1.5 AU).

Investigation into failure[edit]

According to NASA: "An investigation board concluded that the most likely cause of the mishap was structural failure of the spacecraft due to plume heating during the solid-rocket motor burn. Alternate possible but less likely causes determined were catastrophic failure of the solid rocket motor, collision with space debris, and loss of dynamic control of the spacecraft."[7][8]

Proposed reflight[edit]

After the loss of CONTOUR, a replacement spacecraft – CONTOUR 2 – was proposed, scheduled for launch in 2006. However, the replacement did not ultimately materialize.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ DeBoy, C.C.; Haskins, C.B.; Brown, T.A.; Schulze, R.C.; Bernacik, M.A.; Jensen, J.R.; Millard, W.; Duven, D.; Hill, S. (2004). "The RF telecommunications system for the New Horizons mission to Pluto". 2004 IEEE Aerospace Conference Proceedings (IEEE Cat. No.04TH8720). IEEE. pp. 1463–1478. doi:10.1109/aero.2004.1367922. ISBN 978-0780381551. S2CID 1979067.
  • ^ The RF telecommunications system for the New Horizons mission to Pluto IEEEAC paper #1369, Version 4, Updated December 22, 2003
  • ^ Williams., David R. (2002). "CONTOUR (NSSDC/COSPAR ID: 2002-034A)". National Space Science Data Center. Goddard Space Flight Center / National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  • ^ a b c Applied Physics Laboratory (28 June 2002). "The CONTOUR spacecraft". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  • ^ Ulivi, Paolo; Harland, David (14 August 2012). Robotic Exploration of the Solar System: Part 3: Wows and Woes, 1997-2003. Springer Science+Business Media. pp. 250–254. ISBN 9780387096278. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  • ^ a b Osegueda, R.; Carrasco, C.; Orozco, M.; Eftis, J.; Reynolds, E.; Sholar, T. (1 October 2001). "CONTOUR Dust Shield Performance". Journal of Aerospace Engineering. 14 (4): 147–157. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)0893-1321(2001)14:4(147). ISSN 0893-1321.
  • ^ CONTOUR Archived 2008-09-24 at the Wayback Machine at NASA.gov. Retrieved 2012-01-19.
  • ^ "CONTOUR - Mishap Investigation Board Report (PDF) Archived 2006-01-03 at the Wayback Machine. NASA. May 31, 2003. Retrieved 2012-01-19.
  • External links[edit]

    Missions

  • Stardust
  • Genesis
  • CONTOUR
  • MESSENGER
  • Deep Impact
  • Dawn
  • Kepler
  • GRAIL
  • InSight
  • Lucy
  • Psyche
  • VERITAS
  • DAVINCI
  • Opportunity

  • EPOXI
  • NExT
  • Moon Mineralogy Mapper
  • Strofio
  • MEGANE
  • Proposals

    Finalists

  • Titan Mare Explorer
  • Mission 13 and 14
  • Mission 15 and 16
  • Candidates

  • Icebreaker Life
  • ISOCHRON
  • JET
  • LIFE
  • MANTIS
  • Mars Geyser Hopper
  • Moon Diver
  • PADME
  • Phobos Surveyor
  • Whipple
  • Proposals

    Finalists

  • Mission 3
  • Mission 4
  • Candidates

  • CORSAIR
  • ELF
  • ELSAH
  • Oceanus
  • SPRITE
  • VICI
  • VISAGE
  • VOX
    • Underline indicates active current missions
  • Italics indicate missions yet to launch
  • Symbol indicates failure en route or before intended mission data returned
  • List of artificial objects on extraterrestrial surfaces
  • Active

  • OSIRIS-APEX (orbiter)
  • Hayabusa2♯ (lander)
  • Lucy (multiple flybys)
  • LICIACube (flyby)
  • Psyche (orbiter)



  • Past

    Flybys

  • Chang'e 2
  • Clementine
  • CONTOUR
  • Deep Impact
  • Deep Space 1
  • Galileo
  • Halley Armada
  • International Cometary Explorer
  • NEA Scout
  • NEAR Shoemaker
  • Pioneer 7
  • PROCYON
  • Rosetta
  • Stardust
  • Ulysses
  • Orbiters

  • NEAR Shoemaker
  • Rosetta
  • Landers

  • Hayabusa2
  • NEAR Shoemaker
  • Philae
  • Impactors

  • DART
  • Sample return

  • Hayabusa2
  • Stardust
  • OSIRIS-REx
  • Planned

  • DESTINY+ (multiple flybys, 2025)
  • Tianwen-2 (multiple flybys and sample return, 2025)
  • MBR Explorer (multiple flybys and orbiter, 2028)
  • Comet Interceptor (flyby, 2029)
  • Proposed

  • Athena (flyby of Pallas, 2022)
  • Shensuo (flybys, 2024)
  • Centaurus (multiple flybys, 2026–2029)
  • Chimera (orbiter, 2025)
  • CORSAIR (sample return)
  • HAMMER (nuclear impactor concept)
  • MANTIS (multiple flybys)
  • OKEANOS (multiple flybys and sample return, 2026)
  • World Is Not Enough (spacecraft refueling concept)
  • Interstellar Probe (flyby, 2030–2042)
  • Cancelled or
    not developed

  • AIM
  • Asteroid Redirect Mission
  • CAESAR
  • Castalia
  • Clementine 2
  • Comet Hopper
  • CONDOR
  • CRAF
  • Don Quijote
  • Hayabusa Mk2
  • Janus
  • MAOSEP
  • Marco Polo
  • New Horizons 2
  • Vesta
  • Related

  • Asteroid capture
  • Asteroid mining
  • Colonization of asteroids
  • Ceres
  • Pluto
  • Small Solar System bodies
  • Vesta
    • Probes are listed in chronological order of launch. indicates mission failures.

    Orbital launches in 2002

    2003 →

    January

  • INSAT-3C
  • February

  • HESSI
  • Iridium 90, Iridium 91, Iridium 94, Iridium 95, Iridium 96
  • EchoStar VII
  • Intelsat 904
  • Kosmos 2387
  • March

  • STS-109
  • TDRS-9
  • GRACE
  • Progress M1-8
  • Shenzhou 3
  • JCSAT-8, Astra 3A
  • Intelsat 903
  • April

  • STS-110 (ITS S0)
  • NSS-7
  • Soyuz TM-34
  • May

  • Aqua
  • DirecTV-5
  • Feng Yun 1D, Hai Yang 1A
  • Ofek-5
  • Kosmos 2389
  • June

  • STS-111 (Leonardo MPLM)
  • Ekspress A1R
  • Galaxy 3C
  • Iridium 97, Iridium 98
  • NOAA-17
  • Progress M-46
  • July

  • Stellat 5, N-STAR c
  • Kosmos 2390, Kosmos 2391
  • Kosmos 2392
  • August

  • EchoStar VIII
  • Atlantic Bird 1, MSG-1
  • September

  • USERS, Kodama
  • METSAT
  • Tsinghua 2
  • Hispasat 1D
  • Progress M1-9
  • Nadezhda 7
  • October

  • Foton-M No.1
  • INTEGRAL
  • Zi Yuan 2B
  • Soyuz TMA-1
  • November

  • Astra 1K
  • AlSAT-1, Mozhayets 3, Rubin-3
  • December

  • Hot Bird 7, Stentor, MFD-A, MFD-B
  • ADEOS II, Kanta Kun, FedSat, µ-LabSat 1 (RITE 1, RITE 2)
  • NSS-6
  • TrailBlazer-2001 STA, Saudisat 1C, LatinSat A, LatinSat B, UniSat 2, Rubin 2
  • Kosmos 2393
  • Kosmos 2394, Kosmos 2395, Kosmos 2396
  • Shenzhou 4
  • Nimiq 2
  • Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
    Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CONTOUR&oldid=1222350555"

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