Aerobraking
Aerobraking is a technique used by spacecraft in which it uses drag within a planetary atmosphere to reduce its velocity relative to the planet.
Related Topics:
Spacecraft - Drag - Planet - Atmosphere
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Aerobraking has been used extensively over the decades by spacecraft orbiting Earth as a means to remove their orbital velocity and return to the surface. This removes a large amount of kinetic energy over a short period of time, most of which is converted into heat by shock heating the air ahead of the spacecraft. Spacecraft require a sturdy heat shield to survive the maneuver, as well as an aerodynamic shape and good resistance to acceleration. Aerobraking has also been employed in a similar manner by landers sent to Mars, Venus, and Jupiter.
Related Topics:
Orbit - Earth - Kinetic energy - Heat - Shock heating - Heat shield - Aerodynamic - Acceleration - Mars - Venus - Jupiter
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Aerobraking can also be used in a less extreme manner, to adjust the velocity of a spacecraft without permanently reentering the atmosphere. For example, the Mars Global Surveyor Mars orbiter used its solar panels as "wings" to control its passage through the tenuous upper atmosphere of Mars to lower the apoapsis of its orbit over the course of many months. This sort of aerobraking does not result in as extreme temperatures or pressures, and so does not require as many design considerations.
Related Topics:
Mars Global Surveyor - Wing - Apoapsis
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Aerobraking also makes a fictional appearence in Arthur C. Clarke's novel , in which two spacecraft (one Russian, one Chinese) both use aerobraking in Jupiter's atmosphere to shed their excess velocity and position themselves for exploring Jupiter's satellites.
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A further alternative approach to aerobraking and reentry is discussed in the reentry article.
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