See other posts from October 2010
Timeline for the Phobos Sample Return Mission (Phobos Grunt)
Posted by Emily Lakdawalla
2010/10/27 12:13 CDT
Topics:
by Louis D. Friedman
In mid-October, I attended the First Moscow Solar System Symposium. Its focus was mostly on Phobos science and plans for next year's launch of the Phobos Sample Return Mission (also known as Phobos-Grunt), on which The Planetary Society will be flying the Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment. The Phobos Sample Return Mission (PhSRM) will also carry a Chinese Mars Orbiter, Yinghuo-1: the first interplanetary spacecraft of China.
The preparations for a 2011 launch of PhSRM appear to be going well. With more than a year remaining before the planned launch, all of the hardware is complete and assembly and tests are now underway. The mission is scheduled to launch on a Zenit-2 rocket in November 2011 from Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

Lavochkin Association
Phobos-Grunt and Yinghuo-1
The Russian Phobos sample return mission "Phobos-Grunt" will carry a small Chinese-built satellite, "Yinghuo-1," to Mars.- Nov. 2011: Launch
- Nov. 2011 - Sep. 2012: Trajectory correction Maneuvers
- Within 10 days after launch
- 80 days before arrival
- 14 days before arrival
- Oct. 9, 2012: Arrival and orbit insertion at Mars
- Initial orbit: 800 x 80,000 kilometers
- Orbit correction manueuvers
- Separation of Yinghuo-1 Chinese orbiter
- Raise pericenter to approximately 10,000 kilometers
- Jan. 2013: Lower apocenter to about 10,000 km
- Several months of observation of Phobos
- Feb. 9, 2013: Enter quasi-synchronous orbit
- Close to Phobos (standoff distance less than 60 kilometers)
- Feb. 2013: Landing on Phobos
- Feb.-Mar. 2013: Liftoff from Phobos for return
- Feb.-Mar. 2013: Injection to Mars-Earth trajectory
- Aug. 2014: Arrival, entry, and landing on Earth
The return capsule will also include our 89-gram LIFE module and two similar containers from the Russian Institute of Biological Medical Problems with different micro-organisms.
The Chinese Yinghuo-1 Mars orbiter weighs 115 kilograms and will piggyback on the PhSRM for insertion into 800 by 80,000 kilometer orbit at Mars. Yinghuo-1 will be delivered to Russia (NPO Lavochkin) in December 2010. The full PhSRM spacecraft will then undergo final assembly and tests in the first half of 2011, prior to delivery to the launch area in September 2011.
All-in-all, it appears that PhSRM will be ready for launch in 2011.
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