Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Giuseppe Colombo was an Italian mathematician and ground-breaking theorist in orbital mechanics at the University of Padua. He proposed space tethers for linking satellites together, was one of the initiators of the ESA (European Space Agency) Giotto mission to Halley's Comet, and suggested how to put a spacecraft into an orbit that would bring it back repeatedly to the planet Mercury.

  2. Mar 30, 2020 · The mission is named in honour of Giuseppe "Bepi" Colombo (see above). BepiColombo comprises a carrier spacecraft, known as the Mercury Transfer Module (MTM), and two separate orbiters. ESA built the Mercury Planetary Orbiter (MPO), while the Japanese space agency, JAXA, contributed the Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter (also referred to as Mio).

  3. Sep 28, 2021 · The upcoming first Mercury flyby falls on the 101st anniversary of the birth of Giuseppe 'Bepi' Colombo (2 October 1920–20 February 1984), an Italian scientist and engineer for whom the BepiColombo mission is named. Colombo is known for explaining Mercury's peculiar characteristic of rotating about its own axis three times in every two orbits ...

  4. Giuseppe (Bepi) Colombo Biography Giuseppe Colombo was born in Padua, Italy in 1920 where he attended primary and secondary schools. After graduating from the University of Pisa in Mathematics in 1944, he returned to Padua where he worked as Assistant and then Associate Professor of Theoretical Mechanics at the University of Padua.

  5. BepiColombo is named after Professor Giuseppe (Bepi) Colombo (1920-1984) from the University of Padua, Italy, a mathematician and engineer. He was the first to determine that an unsuspected resonance is responsible for Mercury's habit of rotating on its axis three times for every two revolutions it makes around the Sun.

  6. Sep 30, 1999 · Giuseppe (Bepi) Colombo (1920-1984) was a mathematician and engineer of astonishing imagination, whose bald head and grey moustache were familiar in the corridors of both ESA and NASA. Apart from his work on Mercury, Colombo invented tethers for tying satellites together.