Zobrazeno 1 - 5
of 5
pro vyhledávání: '"Ramachand S. Bhat"'
Autor:
Stacia Long, Dolan E. Highsmith, Ramachand S. Bhat, Stuart Demcak, Neil A. Mottinger, Tung-Han You, C. Allen Halsell, Eric Graat, Moriba Jah, Earl Higa
Publikováno v:
SpaceOps 2008 Conference.
After a seven-month interplanetary cruise, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter arrived at Mars and executed a 1.0 km/s Mars Orbit Insertion (MOI) maneuver. The post-MOI orbit was highly elliptical with a 35 hour, 428 km x 45000 km altitude orbit. To esta
Autor:
Eric Graat, Dolan E. Highsmith, Earl Higa, Stacia Long, Allen Halsell, Moriba Jah, Neil A. Mottinger, Tung-Han You, Stuart Demcak, Ramachand S. Bhat
Publikováno v:
Scopus-Elsevier
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) launched on 12 August 2005 from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. After seven months of cruise, MRO reached Mars and successfully performed the Mars Orbit Insertion (MOI) maneuver. Only
Autor:
Kenneth E. Williams, Cliff Helfrich, Mau C. Wong, Julie A. Kangas, Roby S. Wilson, Ramachand S. Bhat, Christopher L. Potts
Publikováno v:
AIAA/AAS Astrodynamics Specialist Conference and Exhibit.
The Stardust Sample Return Capsule (SRC) returned to Earth on January 15, 2006 after seven years of collecting interstellar and comet particles over three heliocentric revolutions, as shown in Figure 1. The SRC was carried on board the Stardust space
Autor:
P. B. Esposito, Ramachand S. Bhat, Cliff Helfrich, Jason Stauch, Stuart Demcak, Jacob Breeden, Shadan Ardalan, David C. Jefferson
Publikováno v:
AIAA/AAS Astrodynamics Specialist Conference and Exhibit.
Autor:
Thomas C. Duxbury, Tseng-Chan M. Wang, S. Bhaskaran, Edward E. Hirst, A. Cheuvront, Susan J. Mumaw, Ramachand S. Bhat, Gregory R. Bollendonk, Martha S. Hanner, J. M. Vellinga, David E. Gingerich, Ray L. Newburn, Kelly A. Parham, Boris Semenov, Donald E. Brownlee, Peter Tsou
Publikováno v:
Journal of Geophysical Research. 108
[1] Seventy-two images of the S-class asteroid 5535 Annefrank, acquired on 2 November 2002 at target ranges of 11,415–3078.5 km, were transmitted to Earth as a part of an engineering readiness test of the Stardust mission. Forty-four of these were