Akatsuki enters Venus orbit
Tokyo, December 9
Japan’s space agency said today its “Akatsuki” probe had successfully entered into orbit around Venus after an initial attempt at reaching the second planet from the sun failed five years ago.
The success marks the first time a Japanese space probe has entered into the orbit of another planet, according to Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency.
“The probe is functioning properly,” JAXA project manager Masato Nakamura said during a press conference.
“We’ll conduct an initial observation for three months... We’ll then shift to full observation in April,” he said.
Akatsuki, meaning dawn, blasted off in 2010 on a 25.2 billion yen ($205 million at current exchange rates) mission to observe the toxic atmosphere and super-hot volcanic surface of Venus. But the box-shaped probe failed to enter the planet’s gravitational pull and shot past it, forcing JAXA technicians to make the second attempt.
The successful Venus orbit came a week after another Japanese space probe, “Hayabusa 2”, passed by Earth to harness the planet’s gravitational pull to propel it towards a far away asteroid in its quest to study the origin of the solar system.
The explorer conducted an “Earth swing-by” and came as close as 3,090 km above the planet’s surface, before switching its orbit to continue towards the tiny Ryugu asteroid.