http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2558&Itemid=227


Japan Boldly Goes 


Written by Todd Crowell   
 Friday, 25 June 2010 
Asteroid probe boosts the country's heretofore invisible space program 

Suddenly, Japan's awareness of its space program has come alive after decades 
during which, for the most part, the Japanese paid little attention to their 
country's exploration plans or even realized they had one. 

Japanese astronauts, usually piggybacking onto other nations' missions into 
space, are usually good for a day or so of newspaper stories and perhaps a 
goodwill visit to some school children. But that all came to a flaming end 
earlier this month when the space probe Hayabusa streaked across the sky over 
Western Australia, safely jettisoning its payload for scientists to examine 
after a seven-year space voyage to a tiny pinprick of an asteroid, Itokawa, 300 
million kilometers from earth - and back. 

Japanese, not to mention the rest of the world, suddenly woke up to the fact 
that their country had become just the second country in world history, and the 
first since the Apollo missions to the moon in the 1970s, to send a space 
vehicle to another world and then return it to Earth. Japan is on the cutting 
edge of space exploration. 

If that were not enough, only a few days earlier the Japanese space agency, 
known as the Japan Aeronautical Exploration Agency (JAXA), launched the 
Akatsuki on a voyage to Venus, where it is expected to go into orbit around the 
planet and obtain information on climate patterns. It carries an array of 
cameras and other instruments to capture the movement of the atmosphere. 

Japan is by no means the first country to send an exploratory probe to Venus, 
but it is the first one to focus primarily on climate. It will complement a 
soon-to -launch European probe meant to orbit both poles to study the chemical 
composition of Venus's atmosphere. 

The same rocket carried aloft yet another space vehicle, the Ikaros, which is 
billed as the world's first space "yacht." By that the agency means it will 
deploy a "sail" made up of an extraordinarily thin polymer membrane designed to 
catch the solar wind and propel the probe onward. 

The asteroid Itokawa is only about 500 meters long and 200 wide, or about the 
size of Hibiya Park in downtown Tokyo. It was only discovered in 1998, or about 
five years before the space probe was launched in May 2003. It was named, at 
Tokyo's request, after Hideo Itokawa, generally considered the father of 
Japanese rocket development. 

The mission can be considered a success in that the probe landed on Itokawa and 
returned to earth with its payload, but it is as yet uncertain whether the 
probe brought back any "asteroid rocks" to examine. The device that was to 
shoot metal balls into the asteroid's surface to kick up debris to be collected 
malfunctioned. 

The space agency hopes that just by settling on the surface of the planetoid 
may have stirred up enough collectable dust to learn something. The capsule was 
recovered in Australia and shipped directly to the JAXA's laboratory in 
Kanagawa prefecture. As of this writing, the technicians have not yet tried to 
open the capsule and examine what is inside. Preliminary X-rays of the insides 
were not optimistic that it had collected enough asteroid material for serious 
analysis, but that remains to be seen. 

Scientists were hoping to learn from the dust something about the formation of 
the solar system, estimated to be 4.6 billion years ago. Unlike other planets 
and the Earth, Itokawa is believed to have been unchanged since the beginning 
of the solar system. 

Whether that part of the mission is a success is in many ways irrelevant. The 
mission has already profoundly changed the way Japanese, and the Japanese 
government, look at space exploration. Even Renho Murata, the new cabinet 
minister charged with identifying wasteful government spending, and a 
bloodhound on science projects, was impressed. 

"It is a feat that all Japanese should be proud of," she said. "This is a major 
message to the world." Editorials in leading Japanese newspapers piled on the 
praise: "We believe Hayabusa has clearly shown us what Japan can - and should - 
aim for," said the Asahi Shimbun. One could speculate that the space agency 
budget, only about a tenth of the U.S. budget for space exploration, is pretty 
safe. 

Among other things the Hayabusa mission demonstrated conclusively that Japan 
has the technology for long-distance missions (At 2,592 days it was the longest 
space voyage on record, eclipsing the 2,542 days of the American "Stardust" 
mission of 1999-2006), which collected cosmic dust but did not land on another 
world. 

Additionally, the long voyage was accomplished despite overcoming numerous 
glitches along the way, using a small-sized high performance ion engine 
developed by the NEC Corp., which creates thrust by expelling xenon ions. 
Although the thrust is weak, the probe gradually gathers speed over time. 

JAXA technicians had to overcome numerous setbacks during the seven-year 
voyage. Three of the four ion thrusters stopped working during the flight, a 
fuel leak rendered the chemical engine inoperable, two of the three attitude 
control antennas broke down and communication was lost for 50 days after the 
second landing on the minor planet. 

Many of Japan's industrial giants contributed parts to the flight. They 
included besides NEC, such companies as Fujitsu, which provided systems for 
orbit control; IHI which helped design the payload capsule; Mitsubishi Electric 
for the ground antennas used to control the flight, and Mitsubishi Heavy 
Industries; the chemical engines. The companies could hardly ask for better 
advertisement for their cutting edge technologies than that they propelled the 
Hayabusa for seven years of space travel and brought it back to earth safely.

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