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Tue, May 18, 2010

Japan Scrubs Launch Of Venus Orbiter And Solar Sail Missions

Poor Weather At Launch Site Forced Launch Cancellation

Japan's Venus Climate Orbiter Akatsuki mission along with the solar sail demonstrator project IKAROS were set to launched late Monday (US EDT) from the The Tanegashima Space Center in the southern portion of Kagoshima Prefecture, but poor weather at the launch site forced flight directors to scrub the mission. No new launch attempt date has been announced, according to the blog of The Planetary Society.

Akatsuki -- which means "dawn" -- is designed to explore the atmosphere of Venus, and its scientific instruments include cameras that will study the planet in wavelengths from ultraviolet to the mid-infrared. The mission's goal is to help answer the question of how Venus and Earth, sister worlds in size and composition, evolved into such different planets.

The second mission's name, IKAROS, stands for Interplanetary Kite-craft Accelerated by Radiation Of the Sun. It is a solar sail that is designed to employ both photon propulsion and thin film solar power generation during its interplanetary cruise.

The Planetary Society, a long-time proponent of solar sail technology, plans to launch its own solar sail, Lightsail-1, early in 2011. This mission is remarkable for its funding source -- Planetary Society members around the world, including an anonymous gift of $1 million from a long-time member.

Flying aboard both spacecraft will be the names of the members of The Planetary Society, along with greetings from others who signed up to send their names and messages to Venus. The Planetary Society and Japan's space exploration center, JSPEC/JAXA, have an agreement to collaborate and cooperate on public outreach and on technical information and results from both IKAROS and LightSail-1.


Venus

"The Planetary Society is proud to be a member of the IKAROS team," said Louis Friedman, Executive Director of The Planetary Society. "Each step forward in solar sailing brings humanity closer to the dream of interstellar flight with light."

LightSail is a three-part program that begins with a flight to Earth orbit, high enough to reach above the tangible atmosphere and fly with only the pressure of sunlight. LightSail-2 will attain a higher orbit and fly much longer. LightSail-3 is the most ambitious mission, heading toward the Sun-Earth Lagrange Point 1 to test solar sailing for an early-warning system against solar storms and to help protect technological civilization from potential disasters.

The names and messages from Planetary Society members and the public are printed in fine letters on an aluminum plate carried aboard Akatsuki, and are on a silica mini-DVD aboard IKAROS. This archival-quality mini-DVD was provided by The Planetary Society with data writing from Plasmon OMS.

FMI: http://www.jaxa.jp/index_e.html

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