…After a long, challenging cruise phase with nine planetary flybys (one by Earth, two by Venus and six by Mercury), BepiColombo finally closed this chapter last Monday by permanently switching off its SEP thrusters…
Without any other source of propulsion, BepiColombo will follow a “ballistic” or free-falling trajectory as it initiates its first key arrival manoeuvre – MTM separation – on 3 September 2026.
After the MTM is ejected, the remaining spacecraft composite (MPO-Mio-MOSIF) will continue its planetary approach using MPO’s chemical propulsion system. This system will adjust the spacecraft’s trajectory ahead of the critical Mercury orbit insertion manoeuvre on 21 November, then guide it into Mio’s deployment orbit in early December before finally lowering MPO into its science orbit by March 2027…



I love the Kerbal-esque architecture of this mission.
-An ion drive stage drops it down a deep hole, toward the sun, then spends all its fuel slowing down almost enough to be captured by Mercury’s gravity instead of just flying by it at screaming fast speed. The empty fuel tanks and ion engines get thrown away when they’re used up.
-Then one of the stacked probes turns on its chemical engines for the capture burn, and it ditches some of its sun screen.
-When its just barely captured in a highly elliptical polar orbit, it releases a satellite equipped with its own independent systems.
-Then it maneuvers to a lower orbit that’s optimal for the other satellite.
Mercury is hard to get to, and only one other space craft has ever orbited it: MESSENGER. Now there will be 2 more delivered with a single launch.
Thanks for the writeup! Interesting project indeed!
9 flybys?! And no “warp to encounter”.

Yeah, Earth was a little distracted in April of 2020.
And then came the thruster issues:
What a ride! Very KSP.
The way Ap is drawn in at Mercury reminds me of airbraking at Kerbin.
So fucking cool. Hats off to the team.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BepiColombo