NEA Scout (Near Earth Asteroid Scout)
Non-EO
NASA
NASA-JPL
Exploration
Quick facts
Overview
Mission type | Non-EO |
Agency | NASA, NASA-JPL |
Launch date | 16 Nov 2022 |
NEA Scout (Near Earth Asteroid Scout) CubeSat Mission
Spacecraft Launch Sensor Complement Development Status References
NEA Scout is an interplanetary 6U CubeSat mission of NASA, a secondary payload of the Artemis-1 mission (formerly, the Orion/EM-1 mission), the recently inaugural and renamed SLS (Space Launch System) EMS-1 mission to lunar space with a planned launch in 2020. The objective of NEA Scout is to fly to about 1 AU from Earth to conduct a flyby of a near Earth asteroid (NEA) less than 100 m across. NEA Scout will be guided by a solar sail, towards its target asteroid 1991VG. 1) 2)
NASA/MSFC (Marshall Space Flight Center) and NASA/JPL (Jet Propulsion Laboratory) are jointly developing this mission with support from NASA/GSFC (Goddard Space Flight Center), NASA/JSC (Johnson Space Center), NASA/LaRC (Langley Research Center), and NASA Headquarters. The Principal Investigator (science) is Julie Castillo-Rogez from NASA/JPL. The Principal Investigator (solar sail) is Les Johnson from NASA/MSFC.
Due to its small size and low albedo, complete characterization of 1991 VG from Earth is difficult. A combination of target orbit uncertainty and long lead times for solar sail trajectory correction maneuvers drive a requirement to identify the target in optical navigation imagery at a distance of about 60,000 km. At closest approach, the same imager will be used for near field imaging of the target. Figure 2 summarizes the NEA Scout concept of operations.
Challenges
Traditional large spacecraft accomplish these imaging objectives using long exposures to increase SNR and identify the low albedo target. Due to the pointing drift and jitter inherent in a small platform, long exposure imaging is less feasible for NEA Scout. Onboard image processing overcomes this challenge. The spacecraft aligns and combines a stack of rapidly acquired images, resulting in a single image with a higher SNR than its constituent images. We filter the aligned images using a temporal median. This solution fits within the memory constrained onboard context. Prior to alignment, each image undergoes a first order image calibration, onboard, to improve the results of the alignment. This calibration consists of a dark current subtraction, flat field adjustment and bad pixel mask application. The temporal median has the added benefit of removing transient imaging artifacts, such as cosmic rays. Interplanetary CubeSats, such as NEA Scout, are additionally physically constrained by the size of their antenna and available transmission power, which is a major challenge for science-driven CubeSat missions. At closest target approach, NEA Scout will be constrained to approximately <1 kbit/s downlink bandwidth.
All CubeSats under development for the Artemis-1 mission are based on a 6U form factor. In the case of NEA Scout, about half of that volume is allocated to the propulsion system (solar sail and thrusters), 1/3rd to the avionics and instrument, and the rest is used by the power system, the antenna, structure, and harness. The instrument is a monochromatic camera certified for deep space that acts both as a science instrument and an optical navigation camera. NEA Scout’s science objectives are to retire strategic knowledge gaps for Human exploration and increase our understanding of near earth asteroids by focusing on a class of targets (<100 m) that has not been covered by previous and ongoing missions. Specific measurement objectives include global shape determination and regional morphology mapping, determination of rotational parameters, including whether the object is a single axis rotator or a tumbler, albedo mapping on a global scale, and high-resolution imaging of a fraction of the surface. At closest approach, the resolution is projected to be <10 cm/pix.
The size of the NEA Scout reference target, 1991 VG, is between 5 and 17 meters. Although ground-based observations acquired 25 years apart have provided relatively accurate ephemeris for that body, its small size and potentially low albedo, make it a challenging target for approach observations. The encounter is planned at about 1 AU from Earth.
The NEA Scout camera detector is similar to that used for the navigation cameras on the Mars 2020 rover. 3) This camera takes advantage of the new generation of arrays with a frame size of ~14 MPixel that enables good spatial resolution of the target images while preserving a large field of view necessary for target search and optical navigation. A major drawback is the large volume of the raw data, 225 Mbit/image for an imaging depth of 16 bits. In absence of a priori knowledge on the target, it is not possible to predict the parameters for lossless compression. However, it is understood that the target fills in only a small fraction of the FOV (Field of View). During the Approach phase (Figure 2), this fraction, including margins based on the target position uncertainty and the spacecraft attitude uncertainties, is about 0.28%. During the science phase of the mission (Reconnaissance and Proximity) the NEA occupies about 7% of the FOV. The total downlinked data volume is about 200 Mbit, the bulk of which is acquired during the science phase. This corresponds to a downlink time of 60 hours at a rate of 1 kbit/s projected at 1 AU.
Besides data volume, the NEA Scout mission is facing another key challenge in the form of pointing conflicts among various subsystems: camera, solar panels, medium-gain antenna, and solar sail. Ground contacts are limited to about 50 minutes, driven by the secondary batteries, followed by recharge periods of about 8 hours. When all constraints are accounted for, the 60-hour downlink has to be broken down over a period of 30 days.
The pointing performance meets the requirement to stay within 0.2 pixel over an integration time of 0.7 seconds and to stay within a box of 100 x 100 pixels during the acquisition of 20 images for the target search activity. Also, use of JPL’s small computer, the Sphinx, provides the data storage and computing performance necessary to implement the data management strategies. 4)
Spacecraft
The "6U" solar sail-propelled CubeSat will address human exploration-focused Strategic Knowledge Gaps. NEA Scout will perform a close and slow rendezvous to provide the first imagery and characterization of a NEA in them solar sail to serve as the primary means of propulsion to the NEA providing a ΔV of up to 2km/s, a magnitude currently impossible to meet with other high technology readiness level CubeSat-sized propulsion systems. Momentum exchange between the Sun's photons and the solar sail membrane provides the means necessary to perform a long duration deep space cruise and perform a NEA rendezvous at(resource utilization, planetary defense, human operations, and science) and paves the way for future multi-spacecraft exploration of NEAs. Using an optical imaging payload, NEA Scout will characterize the morphology, rotational and orbital properties, volume, color type and meteoritic classification, as well as the dust/debris environment of the target. 5)
An Active Mass Translation (AMT) device was added to the design to compensate for an initial offset in Center-of-Mass (CM) and Center-of-Pressure (CP) and a requirement to minimize or eliminate momentum generation while sailing at various attitudes. When combined with sail irregularities such as sail flatness uncertainties, tears in the sail stemming from deployment, micrometeriods or simple design anomalies, the sail thrust vector alignment to the spacecraft CM will vary with the spacecraft’s attitude relative to the solar incidence angle. The AMT will translate roughly half of the spacecraft relative to itself along two axes and change the CP/CM relationship. This will enable the desired range of flight angles and maximize the use of the limited on-board propellant, momentum generation and minimize any required desaturations of the reaction wheels (Ref. 15).
The NEA Scout spacecraft is housed in a 6U (10 cm x 20 cm x 30 cm) CubeSat form factor and is divided into three modules: Avionics, Solar Sail/AMT, and RCS. The Avionics Module houses the majority of the spacecraft electronics and the Attitude Determination and Control System (ADCS). The AMT and Solar Sail Module contains all of the components necessary to deploy and operate the solar sail. The RCS module houses the cold gas reaction control system and the mounting points for the solar panels, one transmission/receive low gain antenna (LGA) pair, a patch array medium gain antenna (MGA), and sun sensors. The electrical wiring between the assemblies is routed through the center of the Solar Sail Assembly and must allow translation between the Avionics and Solar Sail Modules when the AMT is operating. A graphical representation of the spacecraft subsystems and components can be found in Figure 3.
The EPS (Electrical Power System) includes two deployable solar panels. Power generated by the solar arrays is routed to the power control boards located with the avionics. The telecommunications system consists of the JPL-developed Iris transponder, two LGA pairs, and one MGA. The spacecraft ADCS (Attitude Determination and Control Subsystem) is made up of the reaction wheels, the reaction wheel controller, the star tracker, various sun sensors, the AMT, and the RCS.
Launch
The NEA Scout 6U CubeSat will fly as a secondary payload on the Artemis-1 mission, originally known as the Orion EM-1 (Exploration Mission) of the SLS (Space Launch System), with a planned launch in 2022.
Orbit: The orbit of NEA Scout will be that of the Artemis-1 mission to the moon - where NEA Scout will be deployed and thereafter on its own mission.
Sensor Complement
NEA Scout Camera
To reduce development time of the camera while reducing the overall cost and risk inherent to creating a new design, the NEA Scout camera takes advantage of an existing modular camera platform implemented for the OCO-3 (Orbiting Carbon Observatory-3) context cameras. The OCO-3 context camera is provided to the electronics body while allowing mission-specific customizations. To meet the signal to noise ratio and field of view requirements, the NEA Scout camera integrates the monochrome version of the CMV20000 CMOS detector used in the OCO-3 implementation. For the optics, a ruggedized commercial lens was procured that meets the speed and field of view necessary for the object detection and close-up imaging: f/2.8, 50.2 mm focal length and 27º FOV. The image circle projected onto the detector from the lens is 24 mm, reducing the useful detector window to 3840 x 3840 pixels. In practice, the target detection only needs of a reduced size so the detector windowing capability is used to capture a smaller size image for each frame (3840 x 2184 pixels).
Sensor capabilities | |
Type | 20M pixel CMOS image sensor |
Useful array size | 3840 x 3840 pixels |
Pixel size | 6.4 µm2 |
Full well | 15,000 e- |
Dark noise | 8 e- rms |
Windowing | Y-direction only |
Shutter | Global |
Color | Monochrome (with microlenses) |
Data quantization | 12 bit per pixel |
Electrical interface | |
Physical | LVDS (Low Voltage Differential Signaling) |
Protocol | Spacewire RMAP (Remote Memory Access Protocol) |
Power | <3W |
Memory | 64 Mbit |
FPGA (Field Programmable Gate Array) | Microsemi Rad-tolerant ProASIC3 |
Camera specifications | |
Mass | 390 g |
Volume | 63 mm x 63 mm x 71 mm |
Operating temperature | -25ºC to +50ºC |
Survival temperature | -35ºC to +70ºC |
Optics | 27º FOV, f/2.8, 50.2 mm, IFOV=0.09mrad/pixel |
Development Status
• January 20, 2022: Launching with the Artemis I uncrewed test flight, NASA’s NEA Scout will chase down what will become the smallest asteroid ever to be visited by a spacecraft. It will get there by unfurling a solar sail to harness solar radiation for propulsion, making this the agency’s first deep space mission of its kind. 6)
- The target is 2020 GE, a near-Earth asteroid (NEA) that is less than 60 feet (18 meters) in size. Asteroids smaller than 330 feet (100 meters) across have never been explored up close before. The spacecraft will use its science camera to get a closer look, measuring the object’s size, shape, rotation, and surface properties while looking for any dust and debris that might surround 2020 GE.
- Because the camera has a resolution of less than 10 cm per pixel, the mission’s science team will be able to determine whether 2020 GE is solid – like a boulder – or if it’s composed of smaller rocks and dust clumped together like some of its larger asteroid cousins, such as asteroid Bennu.
- “Thanks to the discoveries of NEAs by Earth-based observatories, several targets had been identified for NEA Scout, all within the 5-to-30-meter size range,” said Julie Castillo-Rogez, the mission’s principal science investigator at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. “2020 GE represents a class of asteroid that we currently know very little about.”
- 2020 GE was first observed on March 12, 2020, by the University of Arizona’s Catalina Sky Survey as part of its search for near-Earth objects for NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office.
- Developed under NASA’s Advanced Exploration Systems Division by Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, and JPL, NEA Scout is a science and technology demonstration mission that will enhance the agency’s understanding of small NEAs. Using a six-unit CubeSat form factor, it will ride as one of 10 secondary payloads aboard the powerful Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, which will launch no earlier than March 2022 at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. NEA Scout will then be deployed from a dispenser attached to the adapter ring that connects the rocket and Orion spacecraft.
- The mission will act as a nimble scout for future human and robotic missions that may utilize asteroid resources – and will gain important planetary defense insights about this class of NEA.
- “Although large asteroids are of most concern from a planetary defense perspective, objects like 2020 GE are far more common and can pose a hazard to our planet, despite their smaller size,” said Castillo-Rogez. The Chelyabinsk meteor was caused by a small asteroid about 65 feet (20 meters) in diameter – it exploded over the Russian city on Feb. 15, 2013, creating a shockwave that broke windows all over the city and injured more than 1,600 people. That was the same class of NEA as 2020 GE.
Low Mass, High Performance
- Learning more about asteroid 2020 GE is only part of NEA Scout’s job. It will also demonstrate solar sail technology for deep space encounters. When released from its dispenser after launch, the spacecraft will use stainless steel alloy booms to unfurl a solar sail that will expand from a small package to a sail about the size of a racquetball court, or 925 square feet (86 m2).
- Made from plastic-coated aluminum thinner than a human hair, this lightweight, mirror-like sail will generate thrust by reflecting solar photons – quantum particles of light radiating from the Sun. The sail will provide most of NEA Scout’s propulsion, but small cold-gas thrusters with a limited propellant supply will also assist with maneuvers and orientation.
- “The genesis of this project was a question: Can we really use a tiny spacecraft to do deep space missions and produce useful science at a low cost?” said Les Johnson, the mission’s principal technology investigator at Marshall. “This is a huge challenge. For asteroid characterization missions, there’s simply not enough room on a CubeSat for large propulsion systems and the fuel they require.”
- Sunlight acts as a constant force, so a tiny spacecraft equipped with a large solar sail can eventually travel many miles per second. Solar sails are a high-performance propulsion system for low-mass and low-volume spacecraft, according to Johnson. NEA Scout will maneuver by tipping and tilting its sail to change the angle of sunlight, altering the amount of thrust and direction of travel, similar to how a boat uses the wind to sail.
- In September 2023, asteroid 2020 GE will make a close approach with Earth, and with a gravitational assist from the Moon, NEA Scout will have gathered enough speed to catch up. Mission navigators will fine-tune NEA Scout’s trajectory before the spacecraft approaches within a mile of the asteroid.
- “NEA Scout will accomplish probably the slowest flyby of an asteroid ever – at a relative speed of less than 100 feet [30 meters] per second,” said Castillo-Rogez. “This will give us a few hours to gather invaluable science and allow us to see what asteroids of this class look like up close.”
- NEA Scout sets the stage for future solar sails: NASA’s Advanced Composite Solar Sail System will demonstrate novel, lightweight booms to deploy a solar sail from a CubeSat following its 2022 launch. After that, Solar Cruiser, an 18,000-square-foot (nearly 1,700 m2) solar sail technology demonstration, will use sunlight to travel toward the Sun in 2025, enabling future missions to better monitor space weather.
• July 13, 2021: Sailing on sunlight, NEA Scout will capture images of an asteroid for scientific study. NASA’s Near-Earth Asteroid Scout is tucked away safely inside the agency’s powerful Space Launch System (SLS) rocket at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The solar sailing CubeSat is one of several secondary payloads hitching a ride on Artemis I, the first integrated flight of the agency’s SLS and the Orion spacecraft. 7)
- NEA Scout, a small spacecraft roughly the size of a large shoebox, has been packaged into a dispenser and attached to the adapter ring that connects the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft. The Artemis I mission will be an uncrewed flight test. It also offers deep space transportation for several CubeSats, enabling opportunities for small spacecraft like NEA Scout to reach the Moon and beyond as part of the Artemis program.
- “NEA Scout will be America’s first interplanetary mission using solar sail propulsion,” said Les Johnson, principal technology investigator for the mission at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center. “There have been several sail tests in Earth orbit, and we are now ready to show we can use this new type of spacecraft propulsion to go new places and perform important science.”
- The CubeSat will use stainless steel alloy booms to deploy an aluminum-coated plastic film sail – thinner than a human hair and about the size of a racquetball court. The large-area sail will generate thrust by reflecting sunlight. Energetic particles of sunlight, called photons, bounce off the solar sail to give it a gentle yet constant push. Over time, this constant thrust can accelerate the spacecraft to very high speeds, allowing it to navigate through space and catch up to its target asteroid.
- “This type of propulsion is especially useful for small, lightweight spacecraft that cannot carry large amounts of conventional rocket propellant,” Johnson said.
- NEA Scout is also a stepping-stone to another recently selected NASA solar sail mission, Solar Cruiser, which will use a sail 16 times larger when it flies in 2025.
- Sailing on sunlight, NEA Scout will begin an approximate two-year journey to fly by a near-Earth asteroid. Once it reaches its destination, the spacecraft will use a science-grade camera to capture images of the asteroid – down to less than half an inch (10 centimeters) per pixel – which scientists will then study to further our understanding of these small but important solar system neighbors. High-resolution imaging is made possible thanks to the low-velocity flyby (less than 100 feet, or 30 meters, per second) enabled by the solar sail.
- The data obtained will help scientists understand a smaller class of asteroids – those measuring less than 100 meters (330 feet) across – that have never been explored by spacecraft.
- “The images gathered by NEA Scout will provide critical information on the asteroid’s physical properties such as orbit, shape, volume, rotation, the dust and debris field surrounding it, plus its surface properties,” said Julie Castillo-Rogez, the mission’s principal science investigator at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
- Near-Earth asteroids are also important destinations for exploration, in situ resource utilization, and scientific research. In the past decade, detections of near-Earth asteroids have steadily risen and are expected to grow, offering expanded opportunities as exploration destinations.
- “Despite their size, some of these small asteroids could pose a threat to Earth,” Dr. Jim Stott, NEA Scout technology project manager, said. “Understanding their properties could help us develop strategies for reducing the potential damage caused in the event of an impact.”
- Scientists will use this data to determine what is required to reduce risk, increase effectiveness, and improve the design and operations of robotic and human space exploration, added Castillo-Rogez.
- NEA Scout is developed under NASA’s Advanced Exploration Systems division. The CubeSat is designed and developed by NASA Marshall in Huntsville, Alabama, and JPL in Southern California.
• July 2018: NASA's NEA Scout spacecraft is hitching a ride on the Space Launch System's inaugural flight to lunar space. There, the little CubeSat will deploy an 85 m2 solar sail and eventually spiral out of the Earth-Moon system to visit a near-Earth asteroid. On 28 June 2018, the project completed its first and only full-scale solar sail deployment test at NeXolve, a space materials company near Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. 8)
- "Everything pretty much went in line with the tests we've had to date," said Tiffany Lockett, a project system engineer for NEA Scout, in a phone interview. "It was as close to a flight-like deployment as we could get."
- It's challenging to deploy a space-bound solar sail on Earth, where gravity weighs everything down. Similar to The Planetary Society's LightSail 2 deployment tests, engineers unfurled NEA Scout's solar sail on a large, low-friction table. But since NEA Scout has a bigger sail, the team also used helium balloons to counteract the pull of gravity, and placed the booms on hockey puck-like sliders.
- Alex Few, the project's mechanical lead, said it was important to make sure any help the team gave to NEA Scout didn't invalidate the purpose of the test: to show that the spacecraft can deploy its sails on its own, in space.
- "Seeing the first 30 seconds go smoothly, that was a cool thing," said Few, who can be seen standing on the deployment table in videos from the test. "It was textbook, just how we expected it."
The full NEA Scout flight sail was deployed and tested in the summer of 2018 (Figure 9).
Secondary Payloads
The first flight of NASA’s new rocket, SLS ( Space Launch System), will carry 13 CubeSats/Nanosatellites to test innovative ideas along with an uncrewed Orion spacecraft in 2020. These small satellite secondary payloads will carry science and technology investigations to help pave the way for future human exploration in deep space, including the journey to Mars. SLS’ first flight, referred to as EM-1 (Exploration Mission-1), provides the rare opportunity for these small experiments to reach deep space destinations, as most launch opportunities for CubeSats are limited to low-Earth orbit. 9) 10)
The secondary payloads, 13 CubeSats, were selected through a series of announcements of flight opportunities, a NASA challenge and negotiations with NASA’s international partners.
Overview of the 10 selected US secondary missions for the inaugural Orion/EM-1 test flight plus three CubeSats from international partners 11) 12)
NASA has also reserved three slots for payloads from international partners. These are: 12)
• EQUULEUS (EQUilibriUm Lunar-Earth point 6U Spacecraft) of ISSL (Intelligent Space Systems Laboratory) of the University of Tokyo and JAXA. EQUULEUS will help scientists understand the radiation environment in the region of space around Earth by imaging Earth’s plasmasphere and measuring the distribution of plasma that surrounds the planet. This opportunity may provide important insight for protecting both humans and electronics from radiation damage during long space journeys. It will also demonstrate low-energy trajectory control techniques, such as multiple lunar flybys, within the Earth-Moon region.
• OMOTENASHI (Outstanding MOon exploration TEchnologies demonstrated by NAno Semi-Hard Impactor) of JAXA. JAXA will use the OMOTENASHI to demonstrate the technology for low-cost and very small spacecraft to explore the lunar surface. This technology could open up new possibilities for future missions to inexpensively investigate the surface of the moon. The CubeSat will also take measurements of the radiation environment near the moon as well as on the lunar surface.
• ArgoMoon. The Italian company Argotec is building the ArgoMoon CubeSat under the Italian Space Agency (ASI) internal review and approval process. ArgoMoon will demonstrate the ability to perform operations in close proximity of the ICPS ( Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage), which will send Orion onto its lunar trajectory. It should also record images of the ICPS for historical documentation and to provide valuable mission data on the deployment of other CubeSats. Additionally, this CubeSat should test optical communication capabilities between the CubeSat and Earth.
NASA selected two payloads through the NextSTEP (Next Space Technologies for Exploration Partnerships) Broad Agency Announcement of May 5, 2015:
• LunIR ⟨originally called Skyfire) - Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, Denver, Colorado, will develop a 6U CubeSat to perform a lunar flyby of the moon, taking sensor data during the flyby to enhance our knowledge of the lunar surface. LunIR will test a new technology mid-wave infrared camera and micro-cryocooler. LunIR also includes a visible imager.
• Lunar IceCube - Morehead State University, Kentucky, will build a 6U CubeSat to search for water ice and other resources at a low orbit of only 62 miles above the surface of the moon. This CubeSat will orbit the Moon and prospect for water and other volatiles in lunar regolith using BIRCHES (Broadband Infrared Compact High-Resolution Exploration Spectrometer) developed at NASA/GSFC.
Three payloads were selected by NASA’s Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate:
• NEA Scout (Near-Earth Asteroid Scout), the 6U CubeSat of NASA/MSFC/JPL will perform reconnaissance of an asteroid, take pictures and observe its position in space
• BioSentinel - a 6U CubeSat of NASA/ARC will use yeast to detect, measure and compare the impact of deep space radiation on living organisms over long durations in deep space.
• Lunar Flashlight - a 6U CubeSat of NASA/JPL/MSFC will look for ice deposits and identify locations where resources may be extracted from the lunar surface
Two payloads were selected by NASA’s Science Mission Directorate:
• CuSP – a 6U CubeSat of the SwRI (Southwest Research Institute) “space weather station” to measure particles and magnetic fields in space, testing the practicality for a network of stations to monitor space weather
• LunaH-Map a 6U CubeSat of Arizona State University will map hydrogen within craters and other permanently shadowed regions throughout the moon’s south pole.
Three additional payloads were determined through NASA’s Cube Quest Challenge – sponsored by NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate and designed to foster innovations in small spacecraft propulsion and communications techniques. CubeSat builders will vie for a launch opportunity on SLS’ first flight through a competition that has four rounds, referred to as ground tournaments, leading to the selection in 2017 of the payloads to fly on the mission.
• Cislunar Explorers, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York. Cislunar Explorers’ concept consists of a pair of spacecraft on a mission to orbit the moon. These two spacecraft are mated together as a 6U CubeSat. After deployment from the launch vehicle, they will split apart and each give their initial rotation in the process of decoupling.
• CU-E3(CU Earth Escape Explorer), a 6U CubeSat of the University of Colorado in Boulder, CO. The CU-E3 mission will use a lunar gravity assist maneuver to place the CubeSat in a heliocentric orbit that trails the Earth at a distance > 1AU (Astronomical Unit). The distance between the Earth and the spacecraft will gradually increase over time, reaching 27 million km by the end of its one-year mission.
• Team Miles, Team Miles is led by the company Fluid and Reason LLC. Team Miles is a group of citizen scientists and engineers that initially came together through Tampa Hackerspace in Florida – all participants in the community, nonprofit workshop. Team Miles is a 6U CubeSat to demonstrate navigation in deep space using innovative plasma thrusters. Use of a software defined S-band radio to communicate with Earth.
NASA has also reserved three slots for payloads from international partners. These are: 12)
• EQUULEUS (EQUilibriUm Lunar-Earth point 6U Spacecraft) of ISSL (Intelligent Space Systems Laboratory) of the University of Tokyo and JAXA. EQUULEUS will help scientists understand the radiation environment in the region of space around Earth by imaging Earth’s plasmasphere and measuring the distribution of plasma that surrounds the planet. This opportunity may provide important insight for protecting both humans and electronics from radiation damage during long space journeys. It will also demonstrate low-energy trajectory control techniques, such as multiple lunar flybys, within the Earth-Moon region.
• OMOTENASHI (Outstanding MOon exploration TEchnologies demonstrated by NAno Semi-Hard Impactor) of JAXA. JAXA will use the OMOTENASHI to demonstrate the technology for low-cost and very small spacecraft to explore the lunar surface. This technology could open up new possibilities for future missions to inexpensively investigate the surface of the moon. The CubeSat will also take measurements of the radiation environment near the moon as well as on the lunar surface.
• ArgoMoon. The Italian company Argotec is building the ArgoMoon CubeSat under the Italian Space Agency (ASI) internal review and approval process. ArgoMoon will demonstrate the ability to perform operations in close proximity of the ICPS ( Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage), which will send Orion onto its lunar trajectory. It should also record images of the ICPS for historical documentation and to provide valuable mission data on the deployment of other CubeSats. Additionally, this CubeSat should test optical communication capabilities between the CubeSat and Earth.
All the CubeSats will ride to space inside the Orion Stage Adapter, which sits between the ICPS ( Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage) and Orion (Figure 12). The cubesats will be deployed following Orion separation from the upper stage and once Orion is a safe distance away.
The SPIE ( Spacecraft and Payload Integration and Evolution) office is located at NASA/MSFC (Marshall Space Flight Center) in Huntsville, Alabama, which handles integration of the secondary payloads.
These small satellites are designed to be efficient and versatile—at no heavier than 14 kg, they are each about the size of a boot box, and do not require any extra power from the rocket to function. The science and technology experiments enabled by these small satellites may enhance our understanding of the deep space environment, expand our knowledge of the moon, and demonstrate technology that could open up possibilities for future missions. 13)
A key requirement imposed on the EM-1 secondary payload developers is that the smallsats do not interfere with Orion, SLS or the primary mission objectives. To meet this requirement, payload developers must take part in a series of safety reviews with the SLS Program’s Spacecraft Payload Integration & Evolution (SPIE) organization, which is responsible for the Block 1 upper stage, adapters and payload integration. In addition to working with payload developers to ensure mission safety, the SLS Program also provides a secondary payload deployment system in the OSA (Orion Space Adapter). The deployment window for the CubeSats will be from the time ICPS disposal maneuver is complete (currently estimated to require about four hours post-launch) to up to 10 days after launch. 14)
After its deployment from NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) in 2020, the Near Earth Asteroid (NEA) Scout mission will image an asteroid on a close flyby using an 86m2solar sail as its primary propulsion. NEA Scout, with a 6U CubeSat form factor, is one of several secondary CubeSat payloads to be deployed from the SLS on its maiden flight. The NEA Scout will be ejected from the SLS on a trajectory toward the moon and will use its onboard cold gas propulsion system to attain an elliptical lunar orbit. Once the spacecraft is in orbit, the solar sail will deploy and spacecraft checkout will begin. The NEA Scout will remain in the lunar vicinity until the low-thrust trajectory to the destination asteroid, 1991VG, or another NEA of interest, can be attained. The spacecraft will then begin its 2.0 –2.5 year journey to the asteroid. About one month before the asteroid flyby, NEA Scout will search for the target and start its Approach Phase,using a combination of radio tracking and optical navigation. The solar sail will provide continuous low thrust to enable a relatively slow flyby (10-20 m/s) of the target asteroid under lighting conditions favorable to geological imaging (<50 degree phase angle). Once the flyby is complete, and if the system is still fully functioning, an extended mission will be considered –the reconnaissance of another asteroid or a re-flyby of the first asteroid several months later are both options. NEA Scout is funded by the NASA Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate. 15)
References
1) Jack Lightholder, David R. Thompson, Julie Castillo-Rogez, Christophe Basset, ”Near Earth Asteroid Scout CubeSat Science Data Retrieval Optimization Using Onboard Data Analysis,” 2019 IEEE Aerospace Conference, Big Sky MT, USA, 2-9 March 2019, Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 20 June 2019, URL: https://web.archive.org/web/20220815171855/https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8742190
2) Leslie McNutt, Les Johnson, Dennon Clardy, Julie Castillo-Rogez, Andreas Frick, Laura Jones,”Near-Earth Asteroid Scout,”AIAA Space 2014 Conference and Exposition, 2014 AIAA 2014-4435,Published Online:1 Aug 2014, https://doi.org/10.2514/6.2014-4435
3) J. N. Maki, C. M. McKinney, R. G. Sellar, R. G. Willson, D. S. Copley-Woods, D. C. Gruel, D. L. Nuding, M. Valvo, T. Goodsall, J. McGuire, J. Kempenaar, and T. E. Litwin, “Enhanced Engineering Cameras (EECAMs) For The Mars 2020 Rover,” 3rd International Workshop on Instrumentation for Planetary Missions, 2016, URL: https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/ipm2016/pdf/4132.pdf
4) Brent Sherwood, Sara Spangelo, Andreas Frick, Julie Castillo-Rogez, Andrew Klesh, E. Jay Wyatt, Kim Reh, John Baker, ”Planetary CubeSats come of age,” 66th International Astronautical Congress, Jerusalem, Israel, 12-16 October 2015, paper: IAC -15,A3,5,8, URL: https://trs.jpl.nasa.gov/bitstream/handle/2014/45903/15-4109_A1b.pdf?sequence=1
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The information compiled and edited in this article was provided by Herbert J. Kramer from his documentation of: ”Observation of the Earth and Its Environment: Survey of Missions and Sensors” (Springer Verlag) as well as many other sources after the publication of the 4th edition in 2002. - Comments and corrections to this article are always welcome for further updates (eoportal@symbios.space).
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