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Lutetia flyby navigation campaign up to 21 June 2010

Lutetia flyby navigation campaign up to 21 June 2010


Date: 24 June 2010
Satellite: Rosetta
Depicts: Rosetta - Lutetia flyby target plane
Copyright: ESA

This plot shows the situation in the target plane for Rosetta's flyby of asteroid Lutetia on 10 July 2010. It is based on radiometric data and ground-based astrometric data, as well as the optical navigation data from Rosetta's on-board cameras up to and including 21 June 2010.

The target plane is a planar coordinate system centred on the asteroid and is used for targeting during this close flyby. The target relative position of Rosetta for the flyby is marked in green and is 3160 km from asteroid Lutetia (at the origin of the plot, direction indicated with arrow).

Ellipses indicate 3-sigma error circles around Rosetta's determined positions (crosses) relative to the asteroid.

Up to 21 June, 30 images have been obtained with each of Rosetta's two navigation cameras (NAVCAMs) and 25 images with the OSIRIS narrow angle camera (NAC). These images of Lutetia and the stellar background have been reduced to provide 85 measurements of the direction from Rosetta to the asteroid. Three of the NAVCAM images were discarded, leaving 82 measurements for the orbit determination.

The pale-blue, orange and magenta crosses and associated, dashed error ellipses are previous solutions in the target plane from 7 and 14 June 2010 - see the related images in the right-hand menu.

A trajectory correction manoeuvre (TCM) was performed on 18 June 2010, with a nominal magnitude of 27.5 cm/s, moving Rosetta's projected position in the target plane close to the target. The black, dashed error ellipse is associated with the nominal TCM, as predicted before the manoeuvre.

The blue cross and associated error ellipse is the new solution in the target plane, after the TCM, based on the navigation data up to 21 June. Rosetta's projected position in the target plane now lies 3169 km from Lutetia and only 13 km from the target. The ellipse has semi-axes of 66 × 32 km. The predicted time of closest approach is 15:44:55.51 UTC with a 3-sigma uncertainty of 7.43 seconds.

A zoom on the target region with the solution from 21 June is available from the right-hand menu under "related images".

Last Update: 1 September 2019
29-Mar-2024 09:19 UT

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