Skip Navigation: Avoid going through Home page links and jump straight to content
spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer
NASA Logo    + View the NASA Portal  
Near Earth Object Program
spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer
NEO Basics Search Programs Discovery Statistics Space Missions News Frequently Asked Questions
spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer
Orbit Diagrams Orbit Elements Close Approaches Impact Risk Images Related LInks
spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer

Applied Physics Laboratory
Johns Hopkins University
Laurel, Maryland

Media contacts:
 JHU Applied Physics Laboratory:         NASA Headquarters:
 Helen Worth                             Doug Isbell
 Laurel, MD 20723                        Washington, DC
 Phone: 240-228-5113                     Phone: 202-358-1753
 E-mail: helen.worth@jhuapl.edu          E-mail: douglas.isbell@hq.nasa.gov

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 12 August 1999

NEAR ENGINE BURN PUTS SPACECRAFT ON TARGET FOR EROS

At 1 p.m., today, a 2-minute hydrazine engine burn put the NASA Discovery Program's NEAR spacecraft, on a direct path to intercept asteroid 433 Eros early next year. Commands from the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous Mission Operations Center at The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Md., were carried out flawlessly by the spacecraft.

"The burn was a good test of the orbit correction process we will be using when we reach Eros," says Mark E. Holdridge, NEAR Mission Operations Manager. "We'll be using the same flight software and systems to put us into orbit around the asteroid so we're really pleased to see how well they worked." The burn was the last scheduled major trajectory correction of the mission. It slowed the spacecraft's velocity by just over 10 mph (4.5 meters per second) to about 188 mph (84.2 meters per second) relative to Eros.

Robert W. Farquhar, NEAR Mission Manager says, "We had to complete this burn in order to reach Eros on February 14, 2000. Without it we would have missed the asteroid by about 106,000 miles."

The craft is now approximately 335,000 miles (539,000 kilometers) from Eros. If any additional trajectory correction is needed it will take place on Oct. 20. "The spacecraft and instruments are all operating well," Farquhar says. "We see smooth sailing from now until we reach Eros on Valentine's Day."

The spacecraft is now operating, and will remain operating, on its main computer (Flight Computer 1). All of NEAR's instruments are turned on and for the next few months the mission operations team will be calibrating instruments and testing systems in preparation for rendezvous and the yearlong study of the asteroid.

NEAR will carry out the first comprehensive study of a near-Earth asteroid. After rendezvousing with asteroid Eros on Feb. 14, 2000, it will spend the next year orbiting the asteroid to determine its physical geology, composition, and geophysics.

For more information on the NEAR mission, visit Web site:

http://near.jhuapl.edu

The Applied Physics Laboratory is a not-for-profit laboratory and independent division of The Johns Hopkins University. APL conducts research and development primarily for national security and for nondefense projects of national and global significance. APL is located midway between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. in Laurel, Md.

Menu
FIRST GOV   NASA Home Page Site Manager: Don Yeomans
Webmaster: Ron Baalke
Last Updated:
Feedback Credits Privacy Mailing List NASA