First I’ve heard the term used.
BTW, New Horizons, the Pluto/Kuiper Belt probe, is scheduled to make the Jupiter flyby later this month.
First I’ve heard the term used.
BTW, New Horizons, the Pluto/Kuiper Belt probe, is scheduled to make the Jupiter flyby later this month.
Here’s the key:
I think flyby is just an ordinary pass.
“Swingby trajectory” or “gravity-assist maneuver” are the standard technical terms for a celestial mechanics maneuver that uses the gravity well of a planet to alter its velocity (either in speed or, more typically, direction). This is done to expand the science mission range of objectives and maximize the use of available impulse. I won’t go so far as to say that the terms “flyby” or “slingshot maneuver” have never been used in technical discourse (and a quick Google search shows them being used by NASA in some of their online public education materials, tsk tsk) but in literature searches going back to the days of Pioneer I haven’t seen it used by the experts. I think this is a case of media people finally getting it right after years of incorrigibly muddling the terms.
Stranger
Thanks. Shoulda consulted a dictionary first. Merriam-Webster concurs. I guess all swing-bys (1965) are flybys (1953), but a swing-by is specifically the gravity-assisted trajectory maneuver.
“Flyby” means observing a target as you fly past it, instead of slowing down and staying at that target. It may also alter your trajectory, but that’s not the main goal. For example, an interplanetary probe may do a flyby of an asteroid because there happens to be one along the way.