Will the Parker probe use aerobraking at Venus? If not, why not?











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The Parker probe needs to lose a great deal of orbital energy and angular momentum in order to approach the Sun so closely. It will be aided in doing that by multiple flybys of Venus. Are these purely "gravitational slingshot" maneuvers, or will they actually graze the upper atmosphere of Venus and lose energy that way? If not, why not? The idea seems intuitively appealing.










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  • 2




    That's "lose". I know, English is stupid.
    – Monty Harder
    Nov 29 at 16:19






  • 1




    @MontyHarder unless it's in the opposite direction, then you loose the probe like you loose an stone from a slingshot. Losing the probe isn't recommended though.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37










  • I would also argue that loosening an orbit could mean increasing the periapsis.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37












  • That works out to be aero-acceleration.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 17:28










  • Aerobraking loses velocity with respect to Venus but the probe isn't trying to be captured by Venus. It needs to lose velocity with respect to the sun, which means being redirected in the solar retrograde direction with as high a velocity as possible.
    – Eric Lippert
    Nov 29 at 18:38















up vote
6
down vote

favorite












The Parker probe needs to lose a great deal of orbital energy and angular momentum in order to approach the Sun so closely. It will be aided in doing that by multiple flybys of Venus. Are these purely "gravitational slingshot" maneuvers, or will they actually graze the upper atmosphere of Venus and lose energy that way? If not, why not? The idea seems intuitively appealing.










share|improve this question




















  • 2




    That's "lose". I know, English is stupid.
    – Monty Harder
    Nov 29 at 16:19






  • 1




    @MontyHarder unless it's in the opposite direction, then you loose the probe like you loose an stone from a slingshot. Losing the probe isn't recommended though.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37










  • I would also argue that loosening an orbit could mean increasing the periapsis.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37












  • That works out to be aero-acceleration.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 17:28










  • Aerobraking loses velocity with respect to Venus but the probe isn't trying to be captured by Venus. It needs to lose velocity with respect to the sun, which means being redirected in the solar retrograde direction with as high a velocity as possible.
    – Eric Lippert
    Nov 29 at 18:38













up vote
6
down vote

favorite









up vote
6
down vote

favorite











The Parker probe needs to lose a great deal of orbital energy and angular momentum in order to approach the Sun so closely. It will be aided in doing that by multiple flybys of Venus. Are these purely "gravitational slingshot" maneuvers, or will they actually graze the upper atmosphere of Venus and lose energy that way? If not, why not? The idea seems intuitively appealing.










share|improve this question















The Parker probe needs to lose a great deal of orbital energy and angular momentum in order to approach the Sun so closely. It will be aided in doing that by multiple flybys of Venus. Are these purely "gravitational slingshot" maneuvers, or will they actually graze the upper atmosphere of Venus and lose energy that way? If not, why not? The idea seems intuitively appealing.







venus parker-solar-probe trajectory-design






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 29 at 17:18









Torquad333

31




31










asked Nov 29 at 12:45









Steve Linton

6,07311136




6,07311136








  • 2




    That's "lose". I know, English is stupid.
    – Monty Harder
    Nov 29 at 16:19






  • 1




    @MontyHarder unless it's in the opposite direction, then you loose the probe like you loose an stone from a slingshot. Losing the probe isn't recommended though.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37










  • I would also argue that loosening an orbit could mean increasing the periapsis.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37












  • That works out to be aero-acceleration.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 17:28










  • Aerobraking loses velocity with respect to Venus but the probe isn't trying to be captured by Venus. It needs to lose velocity with respect to the sun, which means being redirected in the solar retrograde direction with as high a velocity as possible.
    – Eric Lippert
    Nov 29 at 18:38














  • 2




    That's "lose". I know, English is stupid.
    – Monty Harder
    Nov 29 at 16:19






  • 1




    @MontyHarder unless it's in the opposite direction, then you loose the probe like you loose an stone from a slingshot. Losing the probe isn't recommended though.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37










  • I would also argue that loosening an orbit could mean increasing the periapsis.
    – John Dvorak
    Nov 29 at 16:37












  • That works out to be aero-acceleration.
    – Joshua
    Nov 29 at 17:28










  • Aerobraking loses velocity with respect to Venus but the probe isn't trying to be captured by Venus. It needs to lose velocity with respect to the sun, which means being redirected in the solar retrograde direction with as high a velocity as possible.
    – Eric Lippert
    Nov 29 at 18:38








2




2




That's "lose". I know, English is stupid.
– Monty Harder
Nov 29 at 16:19




That's "lose". I know, English is stupid.
– Monty Harder
Nov 29 at 16:19




1




1




@MontyHarder unless it's in the opposite direction, then you loose the probe like you loose an stone from a slingshot. Losing the probe isn't recommended though.
– John Dvorak
Nov 29 at 16:37




@MontyHarder unless it's in the opposite direction, then you loose the probe like you loose an stone from a slingshot. Losing the probe isn't recommended though.
– John Dvorak
Nov 29 at 16:37












I would also argue that loosening an orbit could mean increasing the periapsis.
– John Dvorak
Nov 29 at 16:37






I would also argue that loosening an orbit could mean increasing the periapsis.
– John Dvorak
Nov 29 at 16:37














That works out to be aero-acceleration.
– Joshua
Nov 29 at 17:28




That works out to be aero-acceleration.
– Joshua
Nov 29 at 17:28












Aerobraking loses velocity with respect to Venus but the probe isn't trying to be captured by Venus. It needs to lose velocity with respect to the sun, which means being redirected in the solar retrograde direction with as high a velocity as possible.
– Eric Lippert
Nov 29 at 18:38




Aerobraking loses velocity with respect to Venus but the probe isn't trying to be captured by Venus. It needs to lose velocity with respect to the sun, which means being redirected in the solar retrograde direction with as high a velocity as possible.
– Eric Lippert
Nov 29 at 18:38










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
7
down vote



accepted










It's using the gravity of Venus alone. Skimming the atmosphere would risk damaging the spacecraft



The orbit design for the Parker Solar Probe mission. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL



From the NASA blog




On Oct. 3, Parker Solar Probe successfully completed its flyby of Venus at a distance of about 1,500 miles during the first Venus gravity assist of the mission. These gravity assists will help the spacecraft tighten its orbit closer and closer to the Sun over the course of the mission.



Detailed data from the flyby will be assessed over the next few days. This data allows the flight operations team to prepare for the remaining six Venus gravity assists which will occur over the course of the seven-year mission.







share|improve this answer





















  • Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
    – Steve Linton
    Nov 29 at 14:30






  • 4




    The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
    – Machavity
    Nov 29 at 15:01










  • Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
    – Saiboogu
    Nov 29 at 15:48












  • Man, 1,500 miles is close.
    – iamnotmaynard
    Nov 29 at 17:12


















up vote
4
down vote













@Machavity's answer is correct. This is just some addition, interesting data.



I had downloaded the data for Parker Solar Probe from Horizons before the launch. They had state vectors for a complete (planned) mission there (Revised: Aug 24, 2018) from launch until 2025-Aug-31 09:19:00. Currently Horizons is showing a much shorter span because it is now based on the real trajectory, but this data is likely to still be available online somewhere.



I subtracted the state vectors of Parker from Venus an the Sun, and calculated the distance. Only the last approach is close (in late 2024) and it is very close. With the 6 minute cadence that I downloaded, the minimum approach is 6753 km from the center of Venus. With a radius of Venus of 6052 km, that's really close, and the minimum distance in that simulation could be even closer! The exact numbers don't matter so much, but it certainly looks like a close approach is being contemplated here to get very close to the Sun



The first plot is not zoomed in distance, it shows the distance from Parker to the Sun and to Venus.



The second one is distance to Venus, and the last one is pretty close!



The last one is distance to the Sun, and you can see the distance takes a step closer each time it passes Venus, including that last really close one.



I'll come back tomorrow to add the calculation if nobody else does, but the delta-v changes here are huge, and drag in the atmosphere does not come within orders of magnitude of being enough to change the distance to the Sun by this much. They will get as close as they can perhaps, for the gravity, but not for the atmosphere.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    +1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
    – Jack
    Nov 29 at 16:03








  • 1




    @Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
    – uhoh
    Nov 29 at 16:10











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
7
down vote



accepted










It's using the gravity of Venus alone. Skimming the atmosphere would risk damaging the spacecraft



The orbit design for the Parker Solar Probe mission. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL



From the NASA blog




On Oct. 3, Parker Solar Probe successfully completed its flyby of Venus at a distance of about 1,500 miles during the first Venus gravity assist of the mission. These gravity assists will help the spacecraft tighten its orbit closer and closer to the Sun over the course of the mission.



Detailed data from the flyby will be assessed over the next few days. This data allows the flight operations team to prepare for the remaining six Venus gravity assists which will occur over the course of the seven-year mission.







share|improve this answer





















  • Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
    – Steve Linton
    Nov 29 at 14:30






  • 4




    The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
    – Machavity
    Nov 29 at 15:01










  • Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
    – Saiboogu
    Nov 29 at 15:48












  • Man, 1,500 miles is close.
    – iamnotmaynard
    Nov 29 at 17:12















up vote
7
down vote



accepted










It's using the gravity of Venus alone. Skimming the atmosphere would risk damaging the spacecraft



The orbit design for the Parker Solar Probe mission. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL



From the NASA blog




On Oct. 3, Parker Solar Probe successfully completed its flyby of Venus at a distance of about 1,500 miles during the first Venus gravity assist of the mission. These gravity assists will help the spacecraft tighten its orbit closer and closer to the Sun over the course of the mission.



Detailed data from the flyby will be assessed over the next few days. This data allows the flight operations team to prepare for the remaining six Venus gravity assists which will occur over the course of the seven-year mission.







share|improve this answer





















  • Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
    – Steve Linton
    Nov 29 at 14:30






  • 4




    The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
    – Machavity
    Nov 29 at 15:01










  • Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
    – Saiboogu
    Nov 29 at 15:48












  • Man, 1,500 miles is close.
    – iamnotmaynard
    Nov 29 at 17:12













up vote
7
down vote



accepted







up vote
7
down vote



accepted






It's using the gravity of Venus alone. Skimming the atmosphere would risk damaging the spacecraft



The orbit design for the Parker Solar Probe mission. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL



From the NASA blog




On Oct. 3, Parker Solar Probe successfully completed its flyby of Venus at a distance of about 1,500 miles during the first Venus gravity assist of the mission. These gravity assists will help the spacecraft tighten its orbit closer and closer to the Sun over the course of the mission.



Detailed data from the flyby will be assessed over the next few days. This data allows the flight operations team to prepare for the remaining six Venus gravity assists which will occur over the course of the seven-year mission.







share|improve this answer












It's using the gravity of Venus alone. Skimming the atmosphere would risk damaging the spacecraft



The orbit design for the Parker Solar Probe mission. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL



From the NASA blog




On Oct. 3, Parker Solar Probe successfully completed its flyby of Venus at a distance of about 1,500 miles during the first Venus gravity assist of the mission. These gravity assists will help the spacecraft tighten its orbit closer and closer to the Sun over the course of the mission.



Detailed data from the flyby will be assessed over the next few days. This data allows the flight operations team to prepare for the remaining six Venus gravity assists which will occur over the course of the seven-year mission.








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 29 at 13:58









Machavity

2,2741736




2,2741736












  • Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
    – Steve Linton
    Nov 29 at 14:30






  • 4




    The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
    – Machavity
    Nov 29 at 15:01










  • Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
    – Saiboogu
    Nov 29 at 15:48












  • Man, 1,500 miles is close.
    – iamnotmaynard
    Nov 29 at 17:12


















  • Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
    – Steve Linton
    Nov 29 at 14:30






  • 4




    The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
    – Machavity
    Nov 29 at 15:01










  • Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
    – Saiboogu
    Nov 29 at 15:48












  • Man, 1,500 miles is close.
    – iamnotmaynard
    Nov 29 at 17:12
















Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
– Steve Linton
Nov 29 at 14:30




Any more details or sources for the risk to the spacecraft? Obviously going in too deep would be bad, but given they have an incredibly tough heatshield anyway, it's not obvious why a bit of aerobraking would be so risky.
– Steve Linton
Nov 29 at 14:30




4




4




The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
– Machavity
Nov 29 at 15:01




The Parker heat shield is meant to stop the radiant heat from the sun. My bet is that it can't take the friction heat from skimming the Venus atmosphere. Remember, it's going to interface with Venus 6 times. That could wear the shield down, and it needs it to come close to the Sun.
– Machavity
Nov 29 at 15:01












Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
– Saiboogu
Nov 29 at 15:48






Indeed - There's no reason to build it for atmospheric contact and add all that extra mass when the primary mission already demands lots of deadweight just for survival. Plus the additional risks of interacting with an atmosphere we don't know so much about.
– Saiboogu
Nov 29 at 15:48














Man, 1,500 miles is close.
– iamnotmaynard
Nov 29 at 17:12




Man, 1,500 miles is close.
– iamnotmaynard
Nov 29 at 17:12










up vote
4
down vote













@Machavity's answer is correct. This is just some addition, interesting data.



I had downloaded the data for Parker Solar Probe from Horizons before the launch. They had state vectors for a complete (planned) mission there (Revised: Aug 24, 2018) from launch until 2025-Aug-31 09:19:00. Currently Horizons is showing a much shorter span because it is now based on the real trajectory, but this data is likely to still be available online somewhere.



I subtracted the state vectors of Parker from Venus an the Sun, and calculated the distance. Only the last approach is close (in late 2024) and it is very close. With the 6 minute cadence that I downloaded, the minimum approach is 6753 km from the center of Venus. With a radius of Venus of 6052 km, that's really close, and the minimum distance in that simulation could be even closer! The exact numbers don't matter so much, but it certainly looks like a close approach is being contemplated here to get very close to the Sun



The first plot is not zoomed in distance, it shows the distance from Parker to the Sun and to Venus.



The second one is distance to Venus, and the last one is pretty close!



The last one is distance to the Sun, and you can see the distance takes a step closer each time it passes Venus, including that last really close one.



I'll come back tomorrow to add the calculation if nobody else does, but the delta-v changes here are huge, and drag in the atmosphere does not come within orders of magnitude of being enough to change the distance to the Sun by this much. They will get as close as they can perhaps, for the gravity, but not for the atmosphere.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    +1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
    – Jack
    Nov 29 at 16:03








  • 1




    @Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
    – uhoh
    Nov 29 at 16:10















up vote
4
down vote













@Machavity's answer is correct. This is just some addition, interesting data.



I had downloaded the data for Parker Solar Probe from Horizons before the launch. They had state vectors for a complete (planned) mission there (Revised: Aug 24, 2018) from launch until 2025-Aug-31 09:19:00. Currently Horizons is showing a much shorter span because it is now based on the real trajectory, but this data is likely to still be available online somewhere.



I subtracted the state vectors of Parker from Venus an the Sun, and calculated the distance. Only the last approach is close (in late 2024) and it is very close. With the 6 minute cadence that I downloaded, the minimum approach is 6753 km from the center of Venus. With a radius of Venus of 6052 km, that's really close, and the minimum distance in that simulation could be even closer! The exact numbers don't matter so much, but it certainly looks like a close approach is being contemplated here to get very close to the Sun



The first plot is not zoomed in distance, it shows the distance from Parker to the Sun and to Venus.



The second one is distance to Venus, and the last one is pretty close!



The last one is distance to the Sun, and you can see the distance takes a step closer each time it passes Venus, including that last really close one.



I'll come back tomorrow to add the calculation if nobody else does, but the delta-v changes here are huge, and drag in the atmosphere does not come within orders of magnitude of being enough to change the distance to the Sun by this much. They will get as close as they can perhaps, for the gravity, but not for the atmosphere.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 3




    +1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
    – Jack
    Nov 29 at 16:03








  • 1




    @Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
    – uhoh
    Nov 29 at 16:10













up vote
4
down vote










up vote
4
down vote









@Machavity's answer is correct. This is just some addition, interesting data.



I had downloaded the data for Parker Solar Probe from Horizons before the launch. They had state vectors for a complete (planned) mission there (Revised: Aug 24, 2018) from launch until 2025-Aug-31 09:19:00. Currently Horizons is showing a much shorter span because it is now based on the real trajectory, but this data is likely to still be available online somewhere.



I subtracted the state vectors of Parker from Venus an the Sun, and calculated the distance. Only the last approach is close (in late 2024) and it is very close. With the 6 minute cadence that I downloaded, the minimum approach is 6753 km from the center of Venus. With a radius of Venus of 6052 km, that's really close, and the minimum distance in that simulation could be even closer! The exact numbers don't matter so much, but it certainly looks like a close approach is being contemplated here to get very close to the Sun



The first plot is not zoomed in distance, it shows the distance from Parker to the Sun and to Venus.



The second one is distance to Venus, and the last one is pretty close!



The last one is distance to the Sun, and you can see the distance takes a step closer each time it passes Venus, including that last really close one.



I'll come back tomorrow to add the calculation if nobody else does, but the delta-v changes here are huge, and drag in the atmosphere does not come within orders of magnitude of being enough to change the distance to the Sun by this much. They will get as close as they can perhaps, for the gravity, but not for the atmosphere.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer














@Machavity's answer is correct. This is just some addition, interesting data.



I had downloaded the data for Parker Solar Probe from Horizons before the launch. They had state vectors for a complete (planned) mission there (Revised: Aug 24, 2018) from launch until 2025-Aug-31 09:19:00. Currently Horizons is showing a much shorter span because it is now based on the real trajectory, but this data is likely to still be available online somewhere.



I subtracted the state vectors of Parker from Venus an the Sun, and calculated the distance. Only the last approach is close (in late 2024) and it is very close. With the 6 minute cadence that I downloaded, the minimum approach is 6753 km from the center of Venus. With a radius of Venus of 6052 km, that's really close, and the minimum distance in that simulation could be even closer! The exact numbers don't matter so much, but it certainly looks like a close approach is being contemplated here to get very close to the Sun



The first plot is not zoomed in distance, it shows the distance from Parker to the Sun and to Venus.



The second one is distance to Venus, and the last one is pretty close!



The last one is distance to the Sun, and you can see the distance takes a step closer each time it passes Venus, including that last really close one.



I'll come back tomorrow to add the calculation if nobody else does, but the delta-v changes here are huge, and drag in the atmosphere does not come within orders of magnitude of being enough to change the distance to the Sun by this much. They will get as close as they can perhaps, for the gravity, but not for the atmosphere.



enter image description here







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 29 at 15:54

























answered Nov 29 at 15:48









uhoh

33.2k16114409




33.2k16114409








  • 3




    +1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
    – Jack
    Nov 29 at 16:03








  • 1




    @Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
    – uhoh
    Nov 29 at 16:10














  • 3




    +1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
    – Jack
    Nov 29 at 16:03








  • 1




    @Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
    – uhoh
    Nov 29 at 16:10








3




3




+1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
– Jack
Nov 29 at 16:03






+1 Great data-based answer! I think it's worth noting how aerobraking compares to gravity assists in terms of their vectors. Sure, aerobraking can slow you down a lot if you can handle the heat, but it only slows you down relative to Venus. Gravity assists, on the other hand, leave you with the same relative speed to Venus, but change it relative to the Sun, which is what we want in Parker's case
– Jack
Nov 29 at 16:03






1




1




@Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
– uhoh
Nov 29 at 16:10




@Jack if possible can you write that up as another answer? It's really important but I'm swamped and can put much time into writing right now.
– uhoh
Nov 29 at 16:10


















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