Data Description

This page summarizes information about the selected resource and its origin based on SPASE metadata.

Table of Contents

  1. Product
  2. Repository
  3. Instrument
  4. Observatory
  5. Persons

SPASE version 2.0.0

Numerical Data Product: Vega 1 Trajectory Data

Resource ID
spase://VHO/NumericalData/Vega1/Ephemeris/P1D Get XML
Name
Vega 1 Trajectory Data
Description

Daily Vega 1 position data in Solar Ecliptic and HGI coordinates.

Acknowledgement

National Space Science Data Center(NSSDC), Space Physics Data Facility(SPDF).

Contact
Role Person
1. General contact Valery G. Petrov Get XML
2. Technical contact Dr. Natalia E. Papitashvili Get XML
3. Metadata contact Jan Merka Get XML
Release date
2009-05-20 19:08:29
Repository
Name
NSSDC Get XML
Availability
Online
Access rights
Open
URL
Magnetic field measurements from Vega missions

FTP access to Vega mission data at NSSDC.

Format
Text.ASCII
Encoding
ASCII
Instrument
Vega 1 Trajectory Get XML
Measurement type
Ephemeris
Temporal description
Start date
1984-12-22 21:00:00
Stop date
1986-06-29 21:00:00
Cadence
1 day
Observed regions
Comet
Heliosphere.Inner
Venus

Parameters

Parameter #1

Name
Time
Parameter key
Column 1
Description

Time (UT)

Parameter type
Temporal

Parameter #2

Name
Xse
Parameter key
Column 2
Description

X component of spacecraft position in SE coordinates

Units
km
Conversion to SI units
1e3>m
Coordinate system
Cartesian SE
Parameter type
Positional
Qualifier
Component I

Parameter #3

Name
Yse
Parameter key
Column 3
Description

Y component of spacecraft position in SE coordinates

Units
km
Conversion to SI units
1e3>m
Coordinate system
Cartesian SE
Parameter type
Positional
Qualifier
Component J

Parameter #4

Name
Zse
Parameter key
Column 4
Description

Z component of spacecraft position in SE coordinates

Units
km
Conversion to SI units
1e3>m
Coordinate system
Cartesian SE
Parameter type
Positional
Qualifier
Component K

Parameter #5

Name
R
Parameter key
Column 5
Description

Spacecraft radial distance from Sun in AU.

Units
AU
Coordinate system
Spherical HGI
Parameter type
Positional
Qualifier
Magnitude

Parameter #6

Name
Azimuth
Parameter key
Column 6
Description

HGI spacecraft position azimuth, degrees.

Units
deg
Coordinate system
Spherical HGI
Parameter type
Positional
Qualifier
Azimuth angle

Parameter #7

Name
Elevation
Parameter key
Column 7
Description

HGI Spacecraft position elevation, degrees.

Units
deg
Coordinate system
Spherical HGI
Parameter type
Positional
Qualifier
Elevation angle

SPASE version 2.0.0

Instrument: Vega 1 Trajectory

Instrument ID
spase://SMWG/Instrument/Vega1/Ephemeris Get XML
Name
Vega 1 Trajectory
Alternate name
Vega 1 Ephemeris
Description

Vega 1 trajectory

Contact
Role Person
1. Metadata contact Jan Merka Get XML
Release date
2009-05-20 21:10:13
Instrument type
Platform
Investigation name
Spacecraft position
Observatory
Vega 1 Get XML

SPASE version 2.0.0

Observatory: Vega 1

Observatory ID
spase://SMWG/Observatory/Vega1 Get XML
Name
Vega 1
Alternate name
Venera-Halley 1
1984-125A
Description

This spacecraft mission combined a Venus swingby and a Comet Halley flyby. Two identical spacecraft, Vega 1 and Vega 2, were launched December 15 and 21, 1984, respectively. After carrying Venus entry probes to the vicinity of Venus (arrival and deployment of probes were scheduled for June 11-15, 1985), the two spacecraft were retargetted using Venus gravity field assistance to intercept Comet Halley in March 1986. The first spacecraft encountered Comet Halley on March 6, 1986, and the second three days later. The flyby velocity was 77.7 km/s. Although the spacecraft could be targetted with a precision of 100 km, the position of the spacecraft relative to the comet nucleus was estimated to be known only to within a few thousand kilometers. This, together with the problem of dust protection, led to estimated flyby distances of 10,000 km for the first spacecraft and 3000 km for the second.

The spacecraft was three-axis stabilized. Its main features were large solar panels, a high-gain antenna dish, and an automatic pointing platform carrying those experiments that required pointing at the comet nucleus. The automatic platform could rotate through + or -110 deg and + or -40 deg in two perpendicular directions with a pointing accuracy of 5 arc-min and a stability of 1 arc-min/s. It carried the narrow- and the wide-angle camera, the three-channel spectrometer, and the infrared sounder. All other experiments were body-mounted, with the exception of two magnetometer sensors mounted on a 2-m boom and various plasma probes and plasma wavw analyzers mounted on a 5-m boom. The total scientificpayload weighed 125 kg and had a data rate of 65 kbs in fast telemetry mode for encounter. There was also a slow telemetry mode for the cruise mode. The comet-encounter science data-take was from 2.5 h before until 0.5 h after the closest approach, with several periods of data-take before and after, each lasting about 2 h. Continuous coverage for plasma and dust instruments was provided by an onboard memory (5-megabit tape recorder). The spacecraft was shielded from hypervelocity dust impacts by a shield consisting of a 100-micrometer multilayer sheet 20 to 30 cm from the spacecraft, and a 1-mm Al sheet 5 to 10 cm from the spacecraft. Approximately half of the VEGA spacecraft was devoted to the Halley module, and half to the Venus lander package. The total scientific payload weight was 144.3 kg.

The Venus package consisted of a sphere 240 cm in diameter, which separated two days before arrival at Venus and entered the planet's atmosphere on an inclined path, without active maneuvers, as was done on previous Venera missions. The lander probe was identical to those of Venera 9 through 14 and similarly had two objectives, the study of the atmosphere and the study of the superficial crust. In addition to temperature and pressure measuring instruments, the descent probe carried a UV spectrometer for measurement of minor atmospheric constituents, an instrument dedicated to measurement of the concentration of H2O, and other instruments for determination of the chemical composition of the condensed phase: a gas-phase chromatograph; an X-ray spectrometer observing the fluorescence of grains or drops; and a mass spectrograph measuring the chemical composition of the grains or drops. The X-ray spectrometer separated the grains according to their sizes using a laser imaging device, while the mass spectrograph separated them according to their sizes using an aerodynamical inertial separator. After landing, a small surface sample near the probe was to be analyzed by gamma spectroscopy and X-ray fluorescence. The UV spectrometer, the mass spectrograph, and the pressure- and temperature-measuring instruments were developed in cooperation between French and Soviet investigators.

In addition to the lander probe, a constant-pressure instrumented balloon aerostat was deployed after entry into the atmosphere from the upper heat protection hemisphere. It floated at approximately 50 km altitude in the middle, most active layer of the Venus three-tiered cloud system. Data from the balloon instruments were transmitted directly to Earth for the 47-hr lifetime of the mission.

Additional information
NSSDC's Master Catalog

Information about the Vega 1 mission.

Acknowledgement

Soviet Academy of Sciences (U.S.S.R)

Contact
Role Person
1. General contact Mr. Artem Ivankov Get XML
2. Metadata contact Jan Merka Get XML
Release date
2009-05-20 20:00:12
Observatory group
Vega
Location
Region
Comet
Heliosphere.Inner
Venus

SPASE version 2.0.0

Person: Valery G. Petrov

Name
Valery G. Petrov
Organization
IZMIRAN
Address
Troitsk, Moscow Region, 142092, Russia
Person ID
spase://SMWG/Person/Valery.G.Petrov Get XML
Release date
2008-11-26 22:38:59

SPASE version 2.0.0

Person: Dr. Natalia E. Papitashvili

Name
Dr. Natalia E. Papitashvili
Organization
GSFC-Code 612.4
Person ID
spase://SMWG/Person/Natalia.E.Papitashvili Get XML

SPASE version 2.0.0

Person: Jan Merka

Name
Jan Merka
Organization
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Address
Code 672, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA
Email
jan.merka@nasa.gov
Phone
1-301-286-8751
Person ID
spase://SMWG/Person/Jan.Merka Get XML
Release date
2007-08-09 22:02:24

SPASE version 2.0.0

Person: Dr. Edwin J. Grayzeck, Jr.

Name
Dr. Edwin J. Grayzeck, Jr.
Organization
GSFC-Code 690.1
Person ID
spase://SMWG/Person/Edwin.J.Grayzeck.Jr Get XML

SPASE version 2.0.0

Person: Dr. Edwin V. Bell, II

Name
Dr. Edwin V. Bell, II
Organization
GSFC-Code 690.1
Person ID
spase://SMWG/Person/Edwin.V.Bell.II Get XML

SPASE version 2.0.0

Person: Mr. Artem Ivankov

Name
Mr. Artem Ivankov
Organization
Lavochkin Association
Person ID
spase://SMWG/Person/Artem.Ivankov Get XML

SPASE version 1.2.0

Repository: NSSDC

Repository ID
spase://SMWG/Repository/NASA/NSSDC Get XML
Name
NSSDC
Description

National Space Science Data Center

Contact
Role Person
1. General contact Dr. Edwin J. Grayzeck, Jr. Get XML
2. General contact Dr. Edwin V. Bell, II Get XML
Release date
2008-08-26 21:02:30
Prior ID
spase://SMWG/Repository/NSSDC