小郷原 一智
   所属   京都産業大学  理学部 宇宙物理・気象学科
   職種   准教授
言語種別 英語
発行・発表の年月 2016/12
形態種別 その他
査読 査読あり
標題 Studies on Solar System Explorations using DESTINY: the Demonstration and Experiment of Space Technology for Interplanetary Voyage
執筆形態 その他
掲載誌名 TRANSACTIONS OF THE JAPAN SOCIETY FOR AERONAUTICAL AND SPACE SCIENCES, AEROSPACE TECHNOLOGY JAPAN
出版社・発行元 THE JAPAN SOCIETY FOR AERONAUTICAL AND SPACE SCIENCES
巻・号・頁 14(30),pp.Pk_111-Pk_116
著者・共著者 IWATA Takahiro,IMAMURA Takeshi,OGOHARA Kazunori,OYAMA Akira,IKENAGA Toshinori,KAWAKATSU Yasuhiro,MURAKAMI Go,EZOE Yuichiro,KAMEDA Shingo,KEIKA Kunihiro,ARAI Tomoko,MATSUURA Shuji,SAIKI Takanao
概要 <p>DESTINY: the Demonstration and Experiment of Space Technology for Interplanetary Voyage, which is a candidate mission of Epsilon Launch Vehicle, plans to execute scientific observations using instruments with the mass of up to about 10 kg on the transfer and Halo orbit of the sun to earth Lagrangian point L1/L2 or on the fly-by orbit of near earth objects (NEO). Potential scientific objects include in-situ observation and remote sensing from these space are solar system explorations, such as, the observations of plasma and energetic particles around the terrestrial magnetosphere, inter-planetary and inter-stellar dust, and NEO. It is also considered to be useful for the pilot observations for future infrared, gamma-ray, and cosmic-ray space astronomical telescope in the deep space. Applied missions of DESTINY will be able to go to deep space with higher mass of payloads. Using the Epsilon Launch Vehicle, it will convey instruments of up to 50 kg to the space between Venus and Mars. DESTINY launched by the improved launch vehicle with the power of M-V rocket will carry payloads of up to 200 kg into the orbit of Venus and Mars. In these phases, Explorations for Venus, Mars, and multiple NEO, and astronomical observations from the deep space observatory will be realized by low cost deep space missions.</p>
DOI 10.2322/tastj.14.pk_111
ISSN 1884-0485
NAID 130005252789
Put Code(ORCID) 59641444
PermalinkURL http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7666-4442