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dapproche

Dapproche, typically written in French as distance d’approche or simply d’approche, is a term used in astronomy and spaceflight to describe the distance between two moving bodies at their closest approach during an orbital encounter. The concept is most often applied to the minimum separation between a spacecraft and a planet or moon, or between two celestial objects such as a near-Earth asteroid and Earth.

In practice, d’approche refers to the closest distance reached during a defined time window as the bodies

The term is primarily used in French-language technical literature. In English, the equivalent expression is usually

See also: close approach, orbital mechanics, ephemeris, collision risk assessment.

follow
their
gravitational
trajectories.
It
is
a
key
quantity
for
assessing
encounter
geometry,
collision
risk,
and
communication
or
navigation
considerations
for
missions.
Distances
are
derived
from
orbital
elements
and
refined
ephemerides,
sometimes
expressed
as
a
radial
distance
(kilometers
or
astronomical
units)
or
as
a
line-of-sight
separation
depending
on
the
context.
“distance
of
closest
approach”
or
“closest-approach
distance.”
While
d’approche
is
informative
within
its
linguistic
context,
there
is
no
single
universal
standard
spelling
in
non-Francophone
sources,
and
care
should
be
taken
to
translate
or
interpret
it
according
to
the
surrounding
scientific
framework.