CubeSat Instruments to Demonstrate NASA Firsts
Hello reader!
It follows an article published today (11/19), in the
website www.spacedaily.com,
noting that CubeSat Instruments will demonstrate NASA Firsts.
Duda Falcão
MICROSAT BLITZ
CubeSat Instruments to
Demonstrate NASA Firsts
by Staff Writers
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Nov 19, 2014
Image: Courtesy NASA Goddard and Bill Hrybyk.
Todd
Bonalsky and Eftyhia Zesta pose with a special gimbal
table they designed to
test CubeSat-compatible magnetometer
systems at the Goddard Magnetic Test
Facility. For a larger
version of this image please go here.
|
The
Dellingr six-unit CubeSat, which is taking its developers just one year to
design, build and integrate, won't be the only potentially groundbreaking
capability for NASA. Its heliophysics payloads also are expected to significantly
advance science on tiny platforms.
Making
Dellingr's maiden journey perhaps as early as January 2016 are two different
magnetometer systems and a miniaturized ion/mass spectrometer. All three
received support from the Internal Research and Development (IRAD) program at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said Nikolaos
Paschalidis, Goddard's heliophysics technology lead and Dellingr payload
manager.
Like
their colleagues on the Dellingr-development team, instrument scientists and
engineers had just one year to complete their payloads. "Building an
instrument in just one year is a challenge," said Paschalidis. "It
has been very intense," agreed Todd Bonalsky, a Goddard engineer who
designed one of Dellingr's two magnetometer systems. "It will pay back in
the end. We have a niche that needs to be filled."
Never-Before-Flown
Magnetometer Systems
According
to Bonalsky, NASA currently lacks a low-power, inexpensive magnetometer small
enough to fit inside a CubeSat. As a result, the CubeSat community relies on
commercial-off-the-shelf magnetometers "that do not have the necessary
accuracy or precision for science-grade measurements of the auroral zone,"
Bonalsky said.
He
believes his instrument - coupled with another novel, no-boom magnetometer
created by Principal Investigator Eftyhia Zesta - will give the CubeSat
community a tool that delivers high-quality, highly accurate data of Earth's
magnetic fields for a fraction of the cost. However, he readily concedes his
instrument in no way rivals the larger, more robust magnetometers Goddard has
built for NASA's MAVEN, Juno and other interplanetary missions.
"Ours
isn't as capable as these heritage magnetometers, but for our purposes we
really don't need their level of sophistication. We need something that is less
expensive, can fit into a CubeSat, and offers high-resolution, highly accurate
data," he said.
Achieving
this milestone - which will be a first for CubeSats - involved a marriage of
sorts.
All
spacecraft generate their own magnetic fields. To prevent those fields from
contaminating the magnetic forces scientists actually want to measure,
magnetometers are typically placed on a large boom that extends far from the
spacecraft.
CubeSats,
however, don't have the real estate to accommodate such a large device.
Therefore, Bonalsky only had room for a 30-inch boom - which is better, but not
ideal. "Even when deployed, the magnetometer will still be in a fairly
magnetically dirty area," he said.
Enter
the no-boom magnetometer system, a versatile capability that promises
scientific-grade observations on a variety of platforms, including CubeSats.
"It will allow us to take advantage of any potential future ride
opportunity due to its easy integration and low requirements on the bus
functions," Zesta said.
Comprised
of multiple miniaturized fluxgate magnetometer sensors placed inside the
satellite bus, the no-boom magnetometer will measure the magnetic fields or
"noise" generated by torquers, solar panels, motors and other hardware
on the Dellingr spacecraft.
Sophisticated
computer algorithms that Zesta's team created then will analyze both the
external and internal magnetometer data to subtract spacecraft-generated noise
from the actual science data.
"The
Dellingr project is a great opportunity to see how this will work,"
Bonalsky said, adding that both magnetometer systems will undergo testing at
the Goddard Magnetic Test Facility in November. A complete integration must be
completed by the end of December.
"Magnetic
field measurements are perhaps the most fundamental type of measurement in
heliophysics," Zesta said. "CubeSats can offer an inexpensive means
to gather these multipoint measurements, which we can use to improve global
models."
History-Making
Spectrometer
The
third payload, a miniaturized ion/mass spectrometer developed specifically for
CubeSats by a team led by Paschalidis and Goddard heliophysicist Sarah Jones,
is an improved duplicate of another that will be launched aboard the National
Science Foundation-funded ExoCube mission in January 2015.
"CubeSats
provide easy access to space," said Paschalidis, who, while building the
Dellingr payload, completed and delivered the ExoCube instrument to the
California Polytechnic State University in July. The university is leading the
ExoCube mission.
"They
offer the potential to discover something of interest in a relatively short
period of time and the capability to fly a constellation of CubeSats for
simultaneous, multipoint measurements, something which has been the dream
mission for many years. That's how the CubeSat business will evolve."
Like its
ExoCube sibling, the Dellingr instrument will measure the composition and
density of various ions and neutral elements in Earth's lower exosphere and
upper ionosphere, a volatile region of the upper atmosphere that affects
satellite communications and creates a drag that can degrade satellite orbits.
"This
will be the first time we will make direct in-situ measurements of hydrogen,
and the first time since the era of NASA's Dynamic Explorer-2 in 1981-1983 to
make global in-situ measurements of oxygen, helium and nitrogen," Jones
said, referring to ExoCube's science goals. "We're making history with a
CubeSat."
This is
just the beginning, said Paschalidis. With the mass spectrometer flying on two
separate spacecraft, his ultimate goal is to team with others to fly many of
these instruments.
Together,
they could gather simultaneous, multipoint global measurements, which he says
is important to understanding the flow of mass and energy in the thermosphere,
ionosphere, and magnetosphere. This process causes the upper atmosphere to
inflate, creating friction that ultimately brings down satellites and other
space assets. "We're going to do more with this instrument," he
promised.
Fonte: Site http://www.spacedaily.com
Comentário: Pois é
leitor, esta é mais uma notícia sobre as possibilidades do uso da tecnologia de
Cubesats que eu trago aqui por achar que seja do interesse dos grupos
brasileiros que atuam nessa área.
Também como eu postei num outro artigo: "com as tecnologias atuais, inclusive com "componentes de prateleira", podem ser realizadas conquistas importantes na área de ciência espacial", o nosso NanosatC-Br1, está fazendo história, mesmo com um magnetômetro "de patreleira", o XEN-1210 com resolução de 15nT da empresa holandesa Xensor Integration, o ideal é que fosse um instrumento específico para fins científicos e produzido aqui, mas enfim, já é bom.
ResponderExcluirQue fique o exemplo. Que iniciativas independentes o sigam.
Vamos torcer !!!