Proponents
of small satellites say that tiny spacecraft have potentially big roles to play
in planetary exploration.
Today's
small satellites--generally spacecraft weighing around several hundred kilograms--are
confined largely to low Earth orbit where they perform remote sensing missions,
conduct science operations and serve as technology testbeds
and communication relays.
But some
forward thinkers are already looking ahead to interplanetary missions and see
small satellites as a good fit with the space exploration agendas outlined by
the world's spacefaring nations.
The
European Space Agency, for example, is taking a look at a low-cost, multiple
spacecraft Venus mission that would utilize small satellite technologies,
including a small, deployable weather balloon of sorts, to study the planet.
The Indian Space Research Organization last year short listed a gravity-mapping
nanosatellite for inclusion on its Chandrayaan-1
lunar orbiter mission.
Andy
Phipps, a senior engineer at the British small satellite company Surrey
Satellite Technology Ltd., said his team recently completed a so-called
technology reference study funded by the European Space Agency to identify the
technologies and design philosophy needed for the proposed Venus mission.
Phipps said
his team spent 18 months and several hundred-thousand Euros developing a
mission concept featuring two orbiters packed with miniaturized instruments and
a tiny aerobot that would be
dropped into Venus' corrosive atmosphere.
The aerobot, consisting of an instrument-laden gondola
suspended from a balloon, would add about 90 kilograms of mass to one of the
orbiters, a data relay satellite that would be placed in a highly elliptical
orbit around Venus. The aerobot would be dropped into
Venus' atmosphere where it would float at an altitude of 55 kilometers,
circumnavigating the planet several times during its projected 15- to 22-day
mission.
The other
orbiter would be packed with miniaturized instruments and would circle the
planet at a lower altitude, imaging the planet and making scientific
measurements.
The
proposed orbiters themselves would be relatively small for interplanetary
spacecraft, weighing several hundred kilograms apiece. NASA's Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter, in contrast, will weigh nearly 2,200 kilograms at
launch and require an Atlas 5 rocket to reach orbit.
The two
satellites and the inflatable robotic stowaway would launch on a single
Russian-built Soyuz rocket equipped with an upper stage. The total projected
mission cost, Phipps said, is several hundred-million dollars, or about
one-tenth of what the U.S.
and Europe spent on the Cassini-Huygens
mission to Saturn.
The
proposed Venus Entry Probe mission is only one of a half-dozen mission ideas
the European Space Agency is considering as it looks ahead to the 2015-2025
timeframe to try to understand what technologies it should be investing in now.
Phipps said
the technology needs of the Venus Entry Probe mission are considerable and
include: highly protective cover glass to shield imaging instruments from acid
rain; steerable planar array antennas to increase data
return from the aerobot; higher efficiency solar
cells; low-mass structural components that can withstand the planet's corrosive
environment; and lightweight thermal protection system for the aerobot's entry vehicle.
Phipps'
colleagues will be presenting the Venus Entry Probe mission concept at the 19th
Annual Small Satellite Conference in Logan,
Utah, Aug. 8-11.
Also
presenting at the conference is a group of Canadian scientists and engineers
that have come up with a nanosatellite mission dubbed
Lunette that would map the gravitational field of the far side of the Moon.
Kieran
Carroll, a Lunette team member and director of technology development at Gedex Inc., a Toronto-based start-up company specializing
in terrestrial gravity mapping for mineral exploration, said better maps of the
Moon's irregular gravitational field would shed more light on the lunar
interior, aid the cause of exploration by potentially locating useful resources
below the Moon's surface and help engineers better plan and operate missions in
lunar orbit.
Carroll
said that when spacecraft began orbiting the Moon in the 1960s it became clear
just how lumpy and irregular the Moon's gravitational field is compared to the
Earth's. Spacecraft tracking data obtained during the Apollo program and more
recently from NASA's Lunar Prospector mission have produced decent -- yet far
from perfect -- gravity maps of the near side of the Moon. But gravity maps of
the Moon's far side, Carrol said, are "largely guess
work at this point" because Earth-based tracking stations lose sight of
spacecraft as they travel over the lunar horizon.
The Lunette
mission would solve that problem, Carroll said, by substituting
spacecraft-to-spacecraft tracking for Earth-based tracking. Lunette is a
five-kilogram payload that would be added to a low altitude, lunar
polar-orbiting satellite mission such as the Indian Space Research Organisation's Chandrayaan-1, or NASA's Lunar
Reconnaissance Orbiter. The payload consists of a three-and-one-half-kilogram nanosatellite and a small amount of equipment that would
need to be left behind on the parent spacecraft for the mapping mission.
The Lunette
nanosatellite would be released from its parent
spacecraft and then maintain a distance of 100 kilometers. The two spacecraft
would send signals back and forth using low-power transponders. By measuring
slight changes in the signal, the differential effect gravity has on each
spacecraft can be measured, enabling scientists and engineers to create a
detailed map of the Moon's lumpy gravitational field.
"All the
gravity models of the Moon have been done using similar techniques except
tracking stations on the Earth have sent signals to spacecraft at the Moon,"
Carroll said. "That's a classic range-rate tracking exercise NASA does on
almost all spacecraft it sends into deep space."
While that
tried and true technique works fine for mapping the side of the Moon that faces
Earth, it does not work so well for the far side of the Moon, Carroll said.
"What we aim to do is to do Doppler tracking on the far side of the Moon by
tracking between one spacecraft and another."
The Indian
Space Research Organisation short listed Lunette for
inclusion on Chandrayaan-1 last year, Carroll said, but had to move on when the
team was unable to secure an immediate funding commitment from the Canadian
Space Agency.
Likewise, the
window of opportunity for including Lunette on the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
has closed. NASA already has chosen its payloads for the 2008 mission, and the
NASA official in charge of the project said it is too late to accommodate
something like Lunette. "Effectively the door is closed because of the timing,"
NASA Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter program manager Mark Borkowski
said.
Carroll
said the team is still trying to line up a funding commitment for the mission,
which he said could be done for a "Canadian-sized prize" of just a few million
dollars provided accommodations for the tiny nanosatellite
can be secured aboard some future Moon-bound orbiter.