K. Nishiyama, S. Hosoda, R. Tsukizaki, S. Imai, M. Yoshikawa, Y. Tsuda
72nd Internatilonal Astronautical Congress, C4, Oct, 2021 Lead author
JAXA’s asteroid explorer Hayabusa2 completed its operation near the asteroid 162173 Ryugu, which started in June 2018, and carried out a maneuver away from the asteroid on November 13, 2019. In the outbound operation, the total delta-v performed by its ion propulsion was about 1,015 m/s, the space powered flight time reached 6,515 hours, 24 kg of propellant xenon was consumed, and 42 kg remained. On the return trip, 2,400 hours of operation was carried out in two parts, from December 2019 to February 2020 and from May to August 2020. Trajectory correction maneuver TCM-0 was carried out with one ion thruster from September 15 to 17, 2020, which was the last operation of the ion engine system, followed by several TCMs by chemical propulsion. The capsule returned to Earth on December 6, 2020. The total delta-v in the round trip was about 1.3 km/s, and the powered flight time was 9,398 hours. After consuming 31 kg of propellant xenon, 35 kg remained, a series of close flyby with an L-type asteroid 2001 CC21 in 2026 and rendezvous with a fast rotator asteroid 1998 KY26 in 2031 has been proposed as an extended mission of Hayabusa2 and its ion engine were restarted on January 5, 2021. The cumulative operating times for the four ion thrusters are 6,996, 2,880, 9,220, and 8,941 hours, respectively. 12,632-hour powered flight by the ion engine system produced about 1.7 km/s delta-v. An engineering model of Hayabusa2 neutralizer has been subjected to ground durability tests since the summer of 2012 prior to launch. 75,277 hours have passed by the end of September 2021, and it is still operating without failure and testing is ongoing.