Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[E] Poster

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-CG Complex & General

[P-CG20] Future missions and instrumentation for space and planetary science

Thu. May 29, 2025 5:15 PM - 7:15 PM Poster Hall (Exhibition Hall 7&8, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Takefumi Mitani(Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, Institute of Space and Astronautical Science), Masaki Kuwabara(Rikkyo University), Shoichiro Yokota(Graduate School of Science, Osaka University), Yuichiro Cho(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, University of Tokyo)


5:15 PM - 7:15 PM

[PCG20-P05] The Comet Interceptor mission: progress in engineering/qualification model development

*Satoshi Kasahara1, Kazuo Yoshioka1, Naoya Sakatani2, Shingo Kameda3, Ayako Matsuoka4, Naofumi Murata2, Yuki Harada4, Hideyo KAWAKITA5, Seiji Sugita1, Takahiro Sasaki2, Naoto Usami2, Shintaro Nakajima2, Taichi Ito2, Ryu Funase2 (1.The university of Tokyo, 2.JAXA, 3.Rikkyo University, 4.Kyoto University, 5.Kyoto Sangyo University)

Comets are pristine small bodies and thus provide key information about the solar system’s evolution. Remote observations by ground observatories have characterized various comets, while in-situ observations by spacecraft have brought much more detailed information on several comets. However, the direct observations by spacecraft fly-by or rendezvous have been limited to the short-period comets, which neared the sun many times in the past and thus lost some of (or even most of) their primitive characteristics. The Comet Interceptor mission, led by ESA, aims at a long-period comet or an interstellar object. JAXA will provide an ultra-small (24 U) daughter spacecraft (probe B1), whose closest approach will be less than 1,000 km, allowing the first-ever multi-spacecraft fly-by observations of a comet. Here we report our recent progress in the development of engineering/qualification models in 2024-2025.