The Genesis capsule returned to Earth on September 8, 2004, carrying samples of solar wind charged particles. The Genesis project conducted a detailed breakup/burnup analysis before the Earth return to determine if any spacecraft component could survive and reach the ground intact in case of an off-nominal entry. In addition, an independent JPL team was chartered with the responsibility of analyzing several definitive breakup scenarios to verify the official project analysis. This paper presents the analysis and results of this independent team
Of the 190 known satellite breakups between 1961 and 2006, only one generated more than 500 cataloge...
The Genesis spacecraft will collect solar wind samples from a halo orbit about the Sun-Earth L1 poin...
NASA's Genesis capsule, carrying the first samples ever returned from beyond the Moon, took a hard l...
The Genesis spacecraft returned to Earth on September 8, 2004, experiencing a non-nominal reentry in...
The Genesis mission returned to Earth on September 8, 2004, experiencing a non-nominal reentry. The ...
The Genesis spacecraft, launched in August 2001 to collect samples of the solar wind, returned to Ea...
After collecting solar-wind samples for more than two years while orbiting the Sun-Earth Libration p...
The Genesis spacecraft was launched on August 8 from Cape Canaveral on a journey to become the first...
On September 8, 2004, the Genesis spacecraft returned to Earth after spending 29 months about the su...
The Genesis mission returned to Earth on September 8, 2004 after a nearly flawless three-year missio...
Before the spacecraft returned to Earth in September, the Genesis mission had a preliminary assessme...
The Genesis spacecraft, launched on 8 August 2001 from Cape Canaveral, Florida, will be the first sp...
The Genesis Discovery mission will return samples of solar matter for analysis of isotopic and eleme...
Genesis will be the first mission to return samples from beyond the Earth-Moon system. The spacecraf...
This conference features the work of authors from: Georgia Tech’s Space Systems Design Lab, Aerospac...
Of the 190 known satellite breakups between 1961 and 2006, only one generated more than 500 cataloge...
The Genesis spacecraft will collect solar wind samples from a halo orbit about the Sun-Earth L1 poin...
NASA's Genesis capsule, carrying the first samples ever returned from beyond the Moon, took a hard l...
The Genesis spacecraft returned to Earth on September 8, 2004, experiencing a non-nominal reentry in...
The Genesis mission returned to Earth on September 8, 2004, experiencing a non-nominal reentry. The ...
The Genesis spacecraft, launched in August 2001 to collect samples of the solar wind, returned to Ea...
After collecting solar-wind samples for more than two years while orbiting the Sun-Earth Libration p...
The Genesis spacecraft was launched on August 8 from Cape Canaveral on a journey to become the first...
On September 8, 2004, the Genesis spacecraft returned to Earth after spending 29 months about the su...
The Genesis mission returned to Earth on September 8, 2004 after a nearly flawless three-year missio...
Before the spacecraft returned to Earth in September, the Genesis mission had a preliminary assessme...
The Genesis spacecraft, launched on 8 August 2001 from Cape Canaveral, Florida, will be the first sp...
The Genesis Discovery mission will return samples of solar matter for analysis of isotopic and eleme...
Genesis will be the first mission to return samples from beyond the Earth-Moon system. The spacecraf...
This conference features the work of authors from: Georgia Tech’s Space Systems Design Lab, Aerospac...
Of the 190 known satellite breakups between 1961 and 2006, only one generated more than 500 cataloge...
The Genesis spacecraft will collect solar wind samples from a halo orbit about the Sun-Earth L1 poin...
NASA's Genesis capsule, carrying the first samples ever returned from beyond the Moon, took a hard l...