Lucy
thirteenth mission of the Discovery program; multiple-flyby reconnaissance of five Jupiter trojans
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
Lucy
Summary
Lucy is a flyby probe[1]. Lucy draws 307 Wikipedia views per month (flyby_probe category, ranking #3 of 8).[2]
Key Facts
- Lucy is in the country of United States[3].
- Lucy's image is recorded as Lucy spacecraft model.png[4].
- Lucy's instance of is recorded as flyby probe[5].
- Lucy's operator is recorded as National Aeronautics and Space Administration[6].
- Lucy's operator is recorded as Southwest Research Institute[7].
- Lucy is named after Lucy[8].
- Lucy's logo image is recorded as Lucy insignia.svg[9].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Lockheed Martin Space[10].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Northrop Grumman Space Systems[11].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory[12].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Goddard Space Flight Center[13].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Arizona State University[14].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Malin Space Science Systems[15].
- Lucy's manufacturer is recorded as Toray Advanced Composites[16].
- Lucy's COSPAR ID is recorded as 2021-093A[17].
- Lucy's part of is recorded as Discovery Program[18].
- Lucy's Commons category is recorded as Lucy (spacecraft)[19].
- Lucy's space launch vehicle is recorded as Atlas V 401[20].
- Lucy's SCN is recorded as 49328[21].
- Lucy's country of origin is recorded as United States[22].
- Lucy's source of energy is recorded as spacecraft solar array[23].
- Lucy's UTC date of spacecraft launch is recorded as +2021-10-16T00:00:00Z[24].
- Lucy's significant event is recorded as project selection[25].
- Lucy's significant event is recorded as Critical Design Review[26].
- Lucy's significant event is recorded as assembly, test, and launch operations[27].
Why It Matters
Lucy draws 307 Wikipedia views per month (flyby_probe category, ranking #3 of 8).[2] Lucy has Wikipedia articles in 21 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28]