I have to say I am worried about such a complex machine being effectively in storage for such a long journey. Even New Horizons got taken out of hibernation on its way to Pluto now and again, not something you can do with a drone in a hypersonic aeroshell.I keep hoping some way might be come up between now and then to at least shave sometime off the transit time.
BTW, the proposal lists a flight weight of the Dragonfly helicopter of about 420kg. MSL was about twice that (~900kg) and had to use a much more complicated EDL. MSL's cruise mass was about 3840kg, and that included the skycrane stage. So I expect Dragonfly may actually have about half the launch mass of MSL, even including bipropellant propulsive capability on the cruise stage. Cassini was launched with a bunch of gravity assists to Saturn at around 22 km^2/s^2 c3, which puts Dragonfly within range of at least an expendable Falcon 9 and fully reusable Falcon Heavy plus Atlas V with some SRBs and certainly Vulcan and New Glenn. Reusable/refueled starship could probably do it with enough propellant to return Starship to Earth immediately after the escape burn. Or a small kick stage.There are tons of options for launching Dragonfly.I would say Atlas V has a good chance if only because it has a very high reliability record and is already nuclear rated. Dunno if it'll still be flying anything by 2026. Probably.
Quote from: Star One on 06/28/2019 09:09 pmI have to say I am worried about such a complex machine being effectively in storage for such a long journey. Even New Horizons got taken out of hibernation on its way to Pluto now and again, not something you can do with a drone in a hypersonic aeroshell.I keep hoping some way might be come up between now and then to at least shave sometime off the transit time.Not as complex as MSL and Skycrane, I’d argue. But shorter time for MSL.
I have to say I am worried about such a complex machine being effectively in storage for such a long journey. Even New Horizons got taken out of hibernation on its way to Pluto now and again, not something you can do with a drone in a hypersonic aeroshell.
Launch vehicle will be selected three years from launch. Launching 2026, arriving 2034 - with gravity assists.
Quote from: Chris Bergin on 06/27/2019 08:16 pmLaunch vehicle will be selected three years from launch. Launching 2026, arriving 2034 - with gravity assists.Is there any information available on the planned 8-year trajectory? How many gravity assists? Which planets?I've looked, but can't find anything. Maybe my fault. But it must be out there somewhere!
Quote from: Star One on 06/28/2019 09:09 pmI have to say I am worried about such a complex machine being effectively in storage for such a long journey. Even New Horizons got taken out of hibernation on its way to Pluto now and again, not something you can do with a drone in a hypersonic aeroshell.Sure you can; you can run pretty much all of the hardware all you want. You just can't turn the propellers, just like the Mars rovers didn't run their drive motors or robotic arms etc. during their cruise phase.
Quote from: Nick on 06/29/2019 12:33 pmQuote from: Chris Bergin on 06/27/2019 08:16 pmLaunch vehicle will be selected three years from launch. Launching 2026, arriving 2034 - with gravity assists.Is there any information available on the planned 8-year trajectory? How many gravity assists? Which planets?I've looked, but can't find anything. Maybe my fault. But it must be out there somewhere!One of the few times I can add a shameless plug for my own work, but it answers the question. (See attached.)The as-proposed mission uses a VEEGA Trajectory (Figure 7 and Table 3). Earth (launch) - Venus (gravity assist) - Earth (gravity assist twice) - Titan direct approach (no orbit, but straight into the atmosphere) - 8.7 years total. The 2025 "EVEEGA" option was proposed (would have added another Earth gravity assist), but NASA directed the VEEGA 2026 backup to be the baseline. This is actually better because it removes the initial Earth gravity assist means less time in cruise means and less decay of the MMRTG for science.
Quote from: mtozimek on 06/29/2019 02:18 pmQuote from: Nick on 06/29/2019 12:33 pmQuote from: Chris Bergin on 06/27/2019 08:16 pmLaunch vehicle will be selected three years from launch. Launching 2026, arriving 2034 - with gravity assists.Is there any information available on the planned 8-year trajectory? How many gravity assists? Which planets?I've looked, but can't find anything. Maybe my fault. But it must be out there somewhere!One of the few times I can add a shameless plug for my own work, but it answers the question. (See attached.)The as-proposed mission uses a VEEGA Trajectory (Figure 7 and Table 3). Earth (launch) - Venus (gravity assist) - Earth (gravity assist twice) - Titan direct approach (no orbit, but straight into the atmosphere) - 8.7 years total. The 2025 "EVEEGA" option was proposed (would have added another Earth gravity assist), but NASA directed the VEEGA 2026 backup to be the baseline. This is actually better because it removes the initial Earth gravity assist means less time in cruise means and less decay of the MMRTG for science. One thing I was wondering is how comes Cassini only had a six years and nine months transit, I am guessing it is to do with the difference in end target.
Quote from: Star One on 06/29/2019 03:19 pmQuote from: mtozimek on 06/29/2019 02:18 pmQuote from: Nick on 06/29/2019 12:33 pmQuote from: Chris Bergin on 06/27/2019 08:16 pmLaunch vehicle will be selected three years from launch. Launching 2026, arriving 2034 - with gravity assists.Is there any information available on the planned 8-year trajectory? How many gravity assists? Which planets?I've looked, but can't find anything. Maybe my fault. But it must be out there somewhere!One of the few times I can add a shameless plug for my own work, but it answers the question. (See attached.)The as-proposed mission uses a VEEGA Trajectory (Figure 7 and Table 3). Earth (launch) - Venus (gravity assist) - Earth (gravity assist twice) - Titan direct approach (no orbit, but straight into the atmosphere) - 8.7 years total. The 2025 "EVEEGA" option was proposed (would have added another Earth gravity assist), but NASA directed the VEEGA 2026 backup to be the baseline. This is actually better because it removes the initial Earth gravity assist means less time in cruise means and less decay of the MMRTG for science. One thing I was wondering is how comes Cassini only had a six years and nine months transit, I am guessing it is to do with the difference in end target.Dragonfly cannot get a gravity assist at Jupiter/
Quote from: dsmillman on 06/29/2019 03:25 pmQuote from: Star One on 06/29/2019 03:19 pmQuote from: mtozimek on 06/29/2019 02:18 pmQuote from: Nick on 06/29/2019 12:33 pmQuote from: Chris Bergin on 06/27/2019 08:16 pmLaunch vehicle will be selected three years from launch. Launching 2026, arriving 2034 - with gravity assists.Is there any information available on the planned 8-year trajectory? How many gravity assists? Which planets?I've looked, but can't find anything. Maybe my fault. But it must be out there somewhere!One of the few times I can add a shameless plug for my own work, but it answers the question. (See attached.)The as-proposed mission uses a VEEGA Trajectory (Figure 7 and Table 3). Earth (launch) - Venus (gravity assist) - Earth (gravity assist twice) - Titan direct approach (no orbit, but straight into the atmosphere) - 8.7 years total. The 2025 "EVEEGA" option was proposed (would have added another Earth gravity assist), but NASA directed the VEEGA 2026 backup to be the baseline. This is actually better because it removes the initial Earth gravity assist means less time in cruise means and less decay of the MMRTG for science. One thing I was wondering is how comes Cassini only had a six years and nine months transit, I am guessing it is to do with the difference in end target.Dragonfly cannot get a gravity assist at Jupiter/This is completely right. Jupiter and Saturn are in phase to provide quick transfers to Saturn every 19 years, with the Jupiter gravity assist allowing about 2 years to be eliminated from the transfer. Unfortunately the last window for this was around 2014-2019, so the timing is just bad. The Cassini VVEJGA trajectory that launched in 1997 was fortuitously aligned one of these windows and was able to get to Saturn in just under 7 years. There are ways to "buy" out of the problem with a bigger (more expensive) launch vehicle and take a different transfer, but the 8.7 year option was nearly time-optimal given the constraints of required delivery mass, launch vehicles, and ultimately cost for the New Frontiers program.
You can certainly "pay up" to shave off gravity assists (or eliminate them completely). The official VEEGA transfer for the mission is currently the fastest one that closes under the costing ground-rules laid out for New Frontiers. As for entertaining those other possibilities, it's probably best for me not to give an opinion as it falls more under institutional and NASA-based decision making. Just wanted to share what is current for all that are interested!
I wonder if Dragonfly will be carrying any kind of altitude sensor like radar, lidar or even sonar.
Quote from: ugordan on 06/29/2019 06:15 pmI wonder if Dragonfly will be carrying any kind of altitude sensor like radar, lidar or even sonar.Optical flow from onboard cameras?