Giuseppe Colombo
Giuseppe "Bepi" Colombo (2 October 1920 in Padua – 20 February 1984 in Padua) was an Italian scientist, mathematician and engineer at the University of Padua, Italy.
Mercury
[edit]Colombo studied the planet Mercury, and it was his calculations which showed how to get a spacecraft into a solar orbit which would encounter Mercury multiple times, using a gravity assist manoeuvre with Venus. Due to this idea, NASA was able to have the Mariner 10 accomplish three fly-bys of Mercury instead of one.[1] Mariner 10 was the first [2] spacecraft to use gravity assist. Since then, the technique has become common.
Colombo also explained the spin-orbit resonance in Mercury's orbit, showing that it rotates three times for every two orbits around the Sun.
Saturn's rings
[edit]Colombo also made significant contributions to the study of Saturn's rings, mostly using ground-based observations in the era before space exploration reached the outer Solar System.
Other contributions
[edit]- Colombo invented the concept of tethers for tying satellites together.
- Colombo participated in the planning of Giotto, the European Space Agency's mission to Halley's Comet, but died before the spacecraft was launched.
Legacy
[edit]- The Giuseppe Colombo Centre for Space Geodesy in Matera, Italy.
- ESA awards a 'Colombo fellowship' each year to a European scientist working in the field of astronautics
Several astronomical objects and spaceships are named after to honour him:
- The ESA-JAXA mission to Mercury, which launched at 1:45:28 UTC on 20 October 2018, is named BepiColombo.[3]
- The Colombo Gap in Saturn's rings.
- The asteroid 10387 Bepicolombo
References
[edit]- ^ "Giuseppe Bepi Colombo Grandfather of the fly-by". Welcome to ESA. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
- ^ "Mariner 10". 30 November 2010. Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 6 January 2019.
- ^ ESA Press Release: ESA's Mercury mission named BepiColombo in honour of a space pioneer
External links
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