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VK8PDG > NASA     17.11.01 19:51l 78 Lines 3287 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: Genesis Gets to the Point
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To  : NASA@WW


MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

Contact: Martha J. Heil      (818) 354-0850                  

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                      November 15, 2001

GENESIS GETS TO THE POINT

     NASA's Genesis spacecraft will begin its primary science 
mission of collecting particles from the solar wind when it 
begins to orbit a point between the Sun and Earth on Friday, 
Nov. 16.

     Engineers will send a final command to the spacecraft at 
11:03 a.m. Pacific time (1903 Universal time) to begin 
operating its hydrazine thrusters for about 267 seconds. This 
will put the spacecraft into its final orbit at 1908 Universal 
time (11:08 a.m. PST) to begin the particle-gathering phase of 
the mission. The orbit is at a point where the gravity of 
Earth and the Sun are balanced. This is called the Lagrange 
point, or L1.

     "This is a crucial maneuver for Genesis, since it sets up 
the five-loop halo orbit around L1 in which we gather the 
solar wind samples," said project manager Chester Sasaki of 
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., which 
manages the mission. The mission is designed to help 
scientists understand how our solar system formed. 

     After mission managers check to make sure Genesis has 
successfully entered orbit, they will begin to prepare for the 
spacecraft's main goal: collecting solar wind samples.

     L1 is an ideal location for Genesis' studies, since it 
affords an uninterrupted view of the Sun and is beyond Earth's 
magnetosphere, which disrupts the solar wind. Genesis will 
expend very little propellant to stay in orbit, since the 
forces of the Sun, Earth and the spacecraft are carefully 
balanced in its orbit around the point. 

     The mission's planners have built-in maneuvers to 
maintain the spacecraft in its orbit around the Lagrange 
point. If Genesis' injection into orbit goes as planned, the 
next maneuvers will be very small. On Nov. 30, the sample 
return capsule will be opened, and a few days later Genesis 
will open its inner canister, extend its collector arrays and 
begin collecting concentrated ions.

     Genesis will fly in a path nicknamed "the lazy eight": a 
flight path that resembles a well-formed potato chip. Genesis 
heads to the L1 point 1.5 million kilometers (930,000 miles) 
from Earth, and orbits there for 29 months. On its return, the 
spacecraft swoops past Earth and around another Lagrange 
point, L2, a mirror image of L1 on the opposite side of Earth, 
to position itself to enter Earth's atmosphere and return its 
precious cargo of solar wind samples in August 2004.

     JPL manages the Genesis mission for NASA's Office of 
Space Science, Washington, D.C. Lockheed Martin Astronautics, 
Denver, Colo., and Los Alamos National Laboratory, N. M., 
operate the mission jointly with JPL. JPL is a division of the 
California Institute of Technology, the home institute of the 
principal investigator, Dr. Donald Burnett. 

     More information on the Genesis mission can be found at
http://genesismission.jpl.nasa.gov .

               ########


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