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Checking in on the Cameras of NASA's Asteroids-Bound Lucy Spacecraft
by John Spencer, Southwest Research Institute
San Antonio TX (SPX) Apr 13, 2022

File illustration

On Feb. 14, NASA's Lucy spacecraft, which is in the first few months of its journey to the Trojan asteroids, obtained a series of calibration images with its four visible-light cameras.

The first test images were taken in November 2021, shortly after Lucy's Oct. 16, 2021, launch, but the February test was much more extensive. Lucy used its Instrument Pointing Platform to point at 11 different star fields to test camera performance and sensitivity, as well as the spacecraft's ability to point accurately in different directions.

The four cameras are the twin Terminal Tracking Cameras (T2CAM), the Multicolor Visible Imaging Camera (MVIC), and the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (L'LORRI). The T2CAM cameras have a wide field of view, 11 degrees by 8.2 degrees, and are primarily used to automatically lock onto and track the Trojan asteroids during Lucy's close flybys, ensuring that the spacecraft's other instruments are pointed at the target.

MVIC, part of the L'Ralph instrument, is a higher-resolution color scanning camera that can scan its 8.3-degree-tall field of view across as wide a swath as desired, much like the panoramas taken by a mobile phone camera. L'LORRI is a high-resolution monochromatic telephoto camera with a narrow 0.29-degree-square field of view and will obtain Lucy's most detailed images of its asteroid targets.

The test did not include Lucy's infrared spectrometer LEISA (also part of the L'Ralph instrument) or its temperature mapping L'TES instrument, which requires close-up planetary targets to obtain useful data.


Related Links
Lucy
Asteroid and Comet Mission News, Science and Technology


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IRON AND ICE
Shake and Bake as NASA's Psyche tested in spacelike conditions
Pasadena CA (JPL) Apr 05, 2022
To prepare for its launch in August, the Psyche spacecraft was tested to ensure it can operate in the extreme conditions it will face on its trip to a metal-rich asteroid. The conditions that a NASA spacecraft endures are extreme: the violent shaking and cacophony of a rocket launch, the jolt of separating from the launch vehicle, the extreme temperature fluctuations in and out of the Sun's rays, the unforgiving vacuum of space. Before launch, engineers do their best to replicate these harsh ... read more

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