Designing
Lucy’s Path to the Trojan Asteroids – Transcript
[Music]
[Olkin]
NASA’s Lucy mission is
going to be the first mission to explore the Trojan asteroids.
These are asteroids that
live in two swarms: one that’s ahead of Jupiter, and another that’s behind
Jupiter.
And we want to go and
look at these building blocks of the planets, the ones that didn’t get
accumulated into the planets, to really learn about the evolution of our solar
system.
[Sutter]
Lagrange points are
these stable regions of space.
They’re around pretty
much every planet in the solar system.
Jupiter, by virtue of
being the largest planet in the solar system, it also has the biggest Lagrange
points.
And these are little
stable reservoirs where asteroids get in, but they never come out.
In reality, what we have
is sort of a snapshot of what the solar system looked like billions of years
ago.
[Olkin]
Early in the solar
system, the giant planets were migrating outward, away from the Sun, and at one
point there was chaos in the solar system.
Some small bodies were
ejected out of the solar system, others could have been trapped in these
Lagrange points.
And that’s one theory
for how the Trojan asteroids came to be where they are today.
[Music Full]
[Main Title] Lucy:
First Mission To The Trojan Asteroids
[Sutter]
My job as a mission
architect here at Lockheed Martin it’s very interesting, and it sort of
encompasses the biggest picture of the mission.
What is the trajectory?
What sort of propulsion do you need to fly that trajectory? What does the
spacecraft look like?
So in the case of, for
example, Lucy, it’s like:
“Okay, it’s going out
five times further from the Sun than the Earth is, and so it’s going to need
big, huge solar arrays just because of that.”
[Olkin]
Lucy has three
scientific instruments on board the spacecraft, and we’ll also be using two of
the spacecraft’s subsystems to contribute to the science investigation.
With the LORRI
instrument we’ll be able to get panchromatic images, which will tell us about
the geology and the crater history, which gives us the age of the surface.
With the TES instrument
we’ll be able to measure the temperature of the surface at different points.
And with the Ralph
instrument we’ll be able to measure the composition of the surfaces.
[Music Full]
[Title Card] Eight
Asteroids
[Olkin]
The Jupiter Trojans,
they have a variety of surface characteristics.
They have different colors
and different surface compositions, and that leads us to believe that maybe
they formed somewhere else.
In choosing the Lucy
targets, we wanted to be able to compare different objects that have different
surface properties, but a very similar orbit.
Lucy will visit one
main-belt asteroid and seven Trojan asteroids.
[Sutter]
I don’t think there’s
been a single NASA mission that will have visited as many objects on separate
orbits in the solar system as the Lucy mission will.
We launch in October of
2021. That trajectory just basically does a one-year loop around the Sun and
comes back to Earth in October of 2022.
And that will slingshot
us out now onto a trajectory that takes a little more than two years to come
back to the Earth.
Now we’re moving a whole
lot faster than we were.
We get that trajectory
set up, and that second Earth gravity assist takes that velocity and redirects
it in the direction we want that will take us out to the Trojan space.
[Olkin]
On our way out to the L4
swarm of the Trojans, we’re going to visit a main-belt asteroid.
That main-belt asteroid
is named Donaldjohanson, after the discoverer of the Lucy fossil.
We named the Lucy
mission in honor of the Lucy fossil because we learned so much about hominid
development and evolution from that fossil,
just like we’re going to
learn about the solar system evolution from the Lucy mission.
[Sutter]
From there, we take a
couple of years off and we continue to cruise up, until we get to August 2027,
and there we encounter our first Trojan asteroid, it’s called Eurybates.
It’s the product of a
huge collision that happened millions and millions of years ago.
Something big hit it and
just blew it apart, and so Eurybates is the biggest chunk of that cataclysmic
impact.
And it’s a C-class
asteroid, which is kind of interesting because there’s a lot of C-class
asteroids in the main belt, there’s very few of them in Trojan space.
So that’s one of the
mysteries we’re going to get at – is, okay, why is Eurybates so different?
As we’ve studied it and
tried to refine its orbit, we’ve discovered it’s got a little moon, and so
we’re going to try to get pictures of that too as we fly by.
And about a month later,
in September of 2027, we’re encountering our second Trojan asteroid: Polymele.
So it’s one of the
smaller objects. We’re flying by at about six, seven kilometers per second.
We have to take pictures
like crazy as we fly by, but we’re not stopping at any of these.
We come to our next
object, Leucus, and it’s “wash, rinse, repeat.”
And so we snap pictures
like crazy at Leucus and then about seven months after that, we do the exact
same thing at another object called Orus.
And that’s the last L4
swarm object that we’re going to be visiting, and from there we start dropping
down back into the inner solar system, now.
So, we were out past
Jupiter’s orbit a little ways. Now we’re falling back in towards the Earth. So
the trajectory is sort of set up to sort of return back to Earth for free.
And we use that to
redirect the trajectory now towards our final Trojan asteroid.
And so this is an object
out in the L5 swarm, so it’s trailing Jupiter by about sixty degrees.
It’s a roughly
equal-mass binary system called Patroclus and Menoetius. You can imagine it’s
sort of like this dumbbell in space.
So imagine a great big
dumbbell spinning around, you know, but there’s no bar there, it’s just the
objects orbiting each other.
It’s a very rare thing
to find in the inner solar system, however, if you look out past the orbit of
Pluto, equal-mass binaries are kind of common out there.
Another clue, it’s like
– okay, are these objects in the Trojan swarm, are they maybe related to the
Kuiper belt objects out there past Jupiter?
And if they are, this
would be amazing, we can go and visit Kuiper belt objects by just going out to
Jupiter.
[Olkin]
We really have never
seen Trojan asteroids up close before, and we want to understand their geology.
Look at the craters on
the surface to understand the history of their surfaces.
Understand the composition
of their surfaces so that we can maybe learn something about where they formed.
And all of those will be
clues to help us understand how the solar system evolved.
[Music fades]