NASA’s upcoming Lucy Mission gives humanity the opportunity to discover unknowns of our solar system’s creation. It will be the very first space mission to observe and analyze the Trojan asteroids of Jupiter (NASA, 2020). The Lucy mission involves four main objectives including the analysis of the asteroids’ surface color and composition, interiors and bulk properties, satellites and rings, and surface geology. The Discovery-class mission will be completed over a period of 12 years. The complex journey will require three gravity assists from Earth and will pass through two different swarms of Trojan asteroids. On this journey Lucy will have 7 targets, which will include 8 asteroids, with one of them located in the main asteroid belt. The spacecraft is being built through the collaborative effort of multiple institutions in partnership with NASA. The payload of highly advanced instruments will include a color visible imager, infrared imaging spectrometer, high spatial resolution visible imager and a thermal emission spectrometer. This elaborate equipment will enable Lucy to successfully complete the Discovery mission approved by NASA’s Planetary Science Division.