Short description: None
As of 2013, the United States , the Soviet Union, Japan , and the European Space Agency have conducted missions to comets.
| Spacecraft
|
Launch Date[1]
|
Operator
|
Comet
|
Mission
|
Outcome
|
Remarks
|
Carrier rocket[2]
|
ICE (ISEE-3)
|
12 August 1978
|
NASA United States / ESA
|
21P/Giacobini–Zinner
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Extended mission; Closest approach of 7,862 kilometres (4,885 mi) at 11:02 UTC on 11 September 1985. Also made distant observations of 1P/Halley in May 1986.[3]
|
Delta 2914
|
Vega 1 (5VK No.901)
|
15 December 1984
|
Soviet Union
|
1P/Halley
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Flew past Halley after visiting Venus; closest approach 8,889 kilometres (5,523 mi) at 07:20:06 UTC on 6 March 1986.[4]
|
Proton-K/D-1
|
Vega 2 (5VK No.902)
|
21 December 1984
|
Soviet Union
|
1P/Halley
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Flew past Halley after visiting Venus; closest approach at 07:20 UTC on 9 March 1986.[5]
|
Proton-K/D-1
|
Sakigake (MS-T5)
|
7 January 1985
|
ISAS Japan
|
1P/Halley
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Closest approach of 6.99 million kilometres (4.34 million miles) at 04:18 UTC on 11 March 1986.[6]
|
Mu-3S-II
|
| Giotto
|
2 July 1985
|
ESA
|
1P/Halley
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Closest approach of 605 kilometres (376 mi) at 00:03:02 UTC on 14 March 1986.[7]
|
Ariane 1
|
| 26P/Grigg–Skjellerup
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Extended mission. Closest approach of 200 kilometres (120 mi) at 15:30 UTC on 10 July 1992.[7]
|
Suisei (PLANET-A)
|
19 August 1985
|
ISAS Japan
|
1P/Halley
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Closest approach of 152,400 kilometres (94,700 mi) at 13:06 UTC on 8 March 1986[8]
|
Mu-3S-II
|
| 21P/Giacobini–Zinner
|
Flyby
|
Spacecraft failure (Extended mission)
|
Extended mission, spacecraft ran out of fuel en route; flyby had been scheduled for 24 November 1998[8]
|
| Deep Space 1
|
24 October 1998
|
NASA United States
|
107P/Wilson–Harrington[9]
|
Flyby
|
Spacecraft failure
|
Spacecraft was unable to reach Wilson–Harrington due to ion engine operation being suspended while a problem with the probe's star tracker was investigated.[10]
|
Delta II 7326
|
| 19P/Borrelly
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Extended mission
|
Stardust (Discovery 4)
|
7 February 1999
|
NASA United States
|
81P/Wild
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
|
Delta II 7426
|
| Sample return
|
Successful
|
|
| 9P/Tempel
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Extended mission, Stardust-NExT, to survey crater caused by Deep Impact
|
CONTOUR (Discovery 6)
|
3 July 2002
|
NASA United States
|
2P/Encke
|
Flyby
|
Spacecraft failure
|
|
Delta II 7425
|
| 73P/Schwassmann–Wachmann
|
Flyby
|
Spacecraft failure
|
|
| 6P/d'Arrest
|
Flyby
|
Spacecraft failure
|
Flyby provisionally scheduled at time of spacecraft's failure
|
| Rosetta
|
2 March 2004
|
ESA
|
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko
|
Orbiter
|
Successful
|
Entered orbit around 67P at 09:06 UTC on 6 August 2014. On 30 September 2016 mission ended in an attempt to slow land on the comet's surface near a 130 m (425 ft) wide pit called Deir el-Medina.
|
Ariane 5G+
|
| Philae
|
2 March 2004
|
ESA / DLR Germany
|
67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko
|
Lander
|
Successful
|
Carried by Rosetta. Came to rest on the surface of 67P at 17:32 UTC on 12 November 2014. Communications ceased with the loss of battery power at 00:36 UTC on 15 November 2014 and the lander began hibernating. Reactivated on solar power and briefly established contact with ground control again at 20:28 UTC on 13 June 2015, and sporadically until 9 July 2015 when the last communication was received.[11][12]
|
Ariane 5G+
|
Deep Impact (Discovery 7)
|
12 January 2005
|
NASA United States
|
9P/Tempel
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
|
Delta II 7925
|
| Impactor
|
Successful
|
Impact occurred at 05:52 UTC on 4 July 2005.
|
| 103P/Hartley
|
Flyby
|
Successful
|
Extended mission (EPOXI)
|
See also
- List of missions to minor planets (includes asteroids)
- List of minor planets and comets visited by spacecraft
References
- ↑ McDowell, Jonathan. "Launch Log". Jonathan's Space Page. http://planet4589.org/space/log/launchlog.txt.
- ↑ Krebs, Gunter. "Interplanetary Probes". Gunter's Space Page. http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sat/ip_probe.htm.
- ↑ "Solar System Exploration - ISEE-3/ICE". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=ISEEICE&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ "Solar System Exploration - Vega 1". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=Vega_01&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ "Solar System Exploration - Vega 2". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=Vega_02&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ "Solar System Exploration - Sakigake". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=Sakigake&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 "Solar System Exploration - Giotto". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=Giotto&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 "Solar System Exploration - Suisei". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=Suisei&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ Wilson-Harrington is catalogued as both a comet and an asteroid
- ↑ "Solar System Exploration - Deep Space 1". NASA. http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/profile.cfm?Sort=Target&Target=Comets&MCode=DS1&Display=ReadMore.
- ↑ "Rosetta's lander Philae wakes up from hibernation". European Space Agency, Rosetta Blog. 14 June 2015. http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2015/06/14/rosettas-lander-philae-wakes-up-from-hibernation/.
- ↑ Baldwin, Emily (20 July 2015). "Rosetta and Philae status update". European Space Agency. http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2015/07/20/rosetta-and-philae-status-update/.
Spacecraft missions to minor planets and comets |
|---|
- List of minor planets and comets visited by spacecraft
- List of artificial objects on extra-terrestrial surfaces
|
Past and current | | Flybys |
- Cassini–Huygens
- Chang'e 2
- Clementine†
- CONTOUR†
- Deep Impact
- Deep Space 1
- Galileo
- Halley Armada
- Giotto
- Sakigake
- Suisei
- Vega 1
- Vega 2
- International Cometary Explorer
- NEAR Shoemaker
- New Horizons
- Pioneer 7
- PROCYON†
- Rosetta
- Stardust/NExT
- Ulysses
|
|---|
| Orbiters |
- Dawn
- Hayabusa
- Hayabusa2
- NEAR Shoemaker
- OSIRIS-REx
- Rosetta
|
|---|
| Landers |
- Hayabusa
- Hayabusa2
- HIBOU
- MASCOT
- MINERVA-II 2
- OWL
- NEAR Shoemaker
- Philae
|
|---|
| Impactors | |
|---|
| Sample return |
- Hayabusa
- Hayabusa2
- OSIRIS-REx
- Stardust
|
|---|
| |
|---|
| Planned |
- NEA Scout (flyby, 2020-2021)
- Lucy (multiple flybys, 2021)
- DART (impactor and flyby, 2021)
- DESTINY+ (multiple flybys, 2022)
- Psyche (orbiter, 2022)
- Hera (orbiter and landers, 2024)
- Comet Interceptor (flyby, 2028)
|
|---|
| Proposed |
- ASTER (orbiter, 2021)
- Athena (flyby of Pallas, 2022)
- Centaurus (multiple flybys, 2026-2029)
- CORSAIR (sample return)
- HAMMER (nuclear impactor concept)
- MANTIS (multiple flybys)
- OKEANOS (multiple flybys and sample return, 2026)
- World Is Not Enough (spacecraft refueling concept)
- ZhengHe (multiple flybys and sample return, 2024)
|
|---|
Cancelled or not developed |
- AGORA
- AIM
- Asteroid Redirect Mission
- CAESAR
- Castalia
- Clementine 2
- Comet Hopper
- CONDOR
- CRAF
- Don Quijote
- Hayabusa Mk2
- MAOSEP
- Marco Polo
- New Horizons 2
- Vesta
|
|---|
| Related |
- Asteroid belt
- Asteroid capture
- Asteroid mining
- Colonization of asteroids
- Ceres
- Pluto
- Small Solar System bodies
- Near-Earth object
- Trans-Neptunian object
- Trojan
- Vesta
|
|---|
- Probes are listed in chronological order of launch. Italics indicate currently active missions. † indicates mission failures.
|
Space missions by destination |
|---|
| Planets |
- Mercury
- Venus
- Mars
- Outer planets
- Jupiter
- Saturn
- Uranus
- Neptune
|
|---|
| Others |
- The Moon
- Minor planets
- Comets
|
|---|
| Orbiters |
- Extraterrestrial orbiters
- Mars orbiters
- Objects in heliocentric orbit
|
|---|
Solar System |
|---|
- Sun
- Mercury
- Venus
- Earth
- Mars
- Ceres
- Jupiter
- Saturn
- Uranus
- Neptune
- Pluto
- Haumea
- Makemake
- Eris
|
|
- Outline of the Solar System
Solar System → Local Interstellar Cloud → Local Bubble → Gould Belt → Orion Arm → Milky Way → Milky Way subgroup → Local Group → Local Sheet → Virgo Supercluster → Laniakea Supercluster → Observable universe → Universe Each arrow (→) may be read as "within" or "part of".
|
 | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List of missions to comets. Read more |