Comet Rendezvous, Sample Acquisition, Investigation, and Return

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COmet Rendezvous, Sample Acquisition, Investigation, and Return (CORSAIR) is a concept mission to return comet nucleus samples to Earth for detailed analysis. The mission concept was submitted in May 2017 by a team from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in response to the New Frontiers program call for mission 4, but did not pass the initial down selection. As a comet sample return mission was not ultimately selected for mission 4 (Dragonfly, a Titan probe was selected), the CORSAIR team may re-submit the concept to a future New Frontiers program call.

Objectives

The CORSAIR goal is understanding the role of comets as ingredients for planets and life. If selected for development, CORSAIR would rendezvous with comet 88P/Howell for approximately 140 days to perform detailed physical and chemical characterization and return to Earth with comet samples of the nucleus and its coma.

If selected for development, the mission would have launched in 2024, cruise to the comet would take 7 years, including two Earth gravity assists. Rendezvous with the 88P/Howell would happen in May 2031 and the interactions would last up to 294 days. The return trip to Earth would take about 4.3 years.

Scientific payload

CORSAIR's conceptual scientific payload include:

Surface samples would be obtained with the use of a harpoon-like penetrator.

See also

References

  1. ^ "海外ミッションを利用した太陽系サンプルリターン探査" (PDF) (in Japanese). Advisory Committee for Space Engineering. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-10-13. Retrieved 2019-10-13.
  2. ^ a b c d CORSAIR (COmet Rendezvous, Sample Acquisition, Investigation, and Return): A New Frontiers Mission Concept to Collect Samples from a Comet and Return them to Earth for Study (PDF). S. A. Sandford, N. L. Chabot, N. Dello Russo, J. C. Leary, E. L. Reynolds, H. A. Weaver, D. H. Wooden. 80th Annual Meeting of the Meteoritical Society 2017 (LPI Contrib. No. 1987).
  3. ^ "Proposed New Frontiers Missions". Future Planetary Exploration. 4 August 2017. Archived from the original on 20 September 2017. Retrieved 2017-09-20.
  4. ^ Triangular Rollable And Collapsible Boom (TRACTM Boom), NASA SBIR 2016 Solicitation, Proposal Nbr. 16-2 Z4.01-7700.