ESA    Life in Space    Expanding Frontiers    Improving Daily Life    Protecting the Environment    Benefits for Europe  
   
Services
Subscribe
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
 
printer friendly page
Ulysses' trajectory
Ulysses' unique orbit
Swinging by the planets
 
On a long interplanetary voyage, a spacecraft can steal power from the planets. Instead of burning rocket fuel, it approaches a planet on a trajectory such that the planet’s gravity will change its course and speed it up or slow it down, as required.

ESA’s scientific spacecraft employ such manoeuvres. Giotto used the Earth in 1990 to re-aim itself at a second comet. Ulysses swung by Jupiter in 1992 to become the first spacecraft ever to route itself over the poles of the Sun.

To take the NASA-ESA Cassini-Huygens spacecraft to Saturn, or ESA’s Rosetta to Comet Wirtanen, requires multiple swingbys.
 
 
Last update: 29 September 2004

 
 
Related links
Giotto manoeuvreUlysses manoeuvreCassini-Huygens missionRosetta manoeuvres
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2011 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.