Submitted by PromptCritical725 t3_10l6lls in askscience
All the sample return missions I've seen have their own reentry systems. Seems like a large weight penalty and extra complication to do so when the craft can rendezvous with the ISS, be taken on board, and returned to earth on a scheduled supply or crew return mission.
Seems that not having to use it's own reentry vehicle would reduce mission costs, or allow for more or bigger scientific equipment to be carried on the probe.
Am I mistaken here or would this not be a nice effective use of having a continuously manned space vehicle in orbit?
electric_ionland t1_j5v0opz wrote
The main issue is that you would need to match the ISS orbit.
A probe coming in from deep space will have a velocity of more than 11.5km/s. ISS orbits Earth at only around 7.5km/s. This means you need enough fuel to slow down by more than 4km/s (nearly 9000 mph!). This propellant would be way heavier than a heatshield. The few deep space missions that have brought things back have not bothered to slow down to orbital speed. They just slam into the atmosphere and let it do all the braking for free.
Heatshield are actually really convenient (if technically difficult to build) ways to slow down. Think of how big a rocket needs to lift something to orbit. If you did not have atmosphere to slow you down on you way back you would need nearly as big of a rocket to land.