Not necessarily. If the spacecraft and probe are free from the Earth's gravitational field, and the launch speed is slow enough, the probe can return eventually due to the gravitational attraction between spececraft and probe. However, it might take more or less than a day for this to happen, depending upon the launch speed. If the launch speed is too high, the probe will exceed the escape velocity and keep on going.
If the spaceccraft is an Earth satellite, the situation is more complicated. The probe will return to the same place where the launch occured, but the orbit will have charged and the spacecraft will arrive there at a different time because they have different orbital periods.
A spacecraft launches a probe at a constant speed. A day later, the probe returns at the same speed. Did the probe have to burn any fuel?
4 answers
Ahh ok, thank you very much!
You're very welcome. My word "charged" at the end was supposed to be "changed". Maybe you figured that out anyway.
If the spacecraft is in a low Earth circular orbit, the probe would return to the spacecraft with the same velocity if the probe were launched into an elliptical orbit having a period of 2, 4, 8, etc. times the period of the launching spacecraft.
For instance, if the spacecraft's period was 90 minutes, the probe could be launched into an elliptical orbit having a period of 180 minutes meaning that the spacecraft would travel 16 orbits while the probe would travel 8 orbits during the 24 hour period before they would meet.
This ignores the precession of the orbital planes for inclinations less than ~98ยบ.
For instance, if the spacecraft's period was 90 minutes, the probe could be launched into an elliptical orbit having a period of 180 minutes meaning that the spacecraft would travel 16 orbits while the probe would travel 8 orbits during the 24 hour period before they would meet.
This ignores the precession of the orbital planes for inclinations less than ~98ยบ.