1 / 15

Programmatic Issues Discussion

Programmatic Issues Discussion. (Between NASA and CNES). Surface Water Ocean Topography. - recommended by NRC decadal survey for launch in 2013-16 . Measurement of ocean mesoscale eddies and their interaction with currents with centimeter level topographic radar interferometry

Download Presentation

Programmatic Issues Discussion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Programmatic IssuesDiscussion (Between NASA and CNES)

  2. Surface Water Ocean Topography - recommended by NRC decadal survey for launch in 2013-16 • Measurement of ocean mesoscale eddies and their interaction with currents with centimeter level topographic radar interferometry • High resolution ocean topographic measurements are important to understanding the ocean heat/energy budget, which is a key variable for climate modeling Surface Water • Determine surface water storage change and discharge to predict the land surface branch of the global hydrologic cycle • Asses the role of fresh water storage as a regulator of the biogeochemical cycle Sea Surface Topography • Measure ocean mesoscale activity, including fronts, eddies and boundary currents and Asses physical-biological interactions • Measure Basin-scale ocean circulation, heat transport, El Nino/La Nina, and sea level rise • Bathymetry • Improve understanding of maritime gravity field and global bathymetry 4-2

  3. Water-HM MeetingCNES HQ, Paris, FranceFeb 1, 2008 Summary of ongoing activities • IIP proposal for Water-HM risk reduction submitted • AITT proposal to fly Ka-band altimeter over ice funded (will fly over some surface water targets en route) • NASA/JPL investments in radar testbed, including Ka-band capability • NASA/JPL mission formulation studies • NASA ‘08 funding for first 7 Decadal Survey missions (including SWOT) • Continuation in ‘09

  4. Water-HM MeetingCNES HQ, Paris, FranceFeb 1, 2008 Summary of Issues • Division of Responsibilities Amongst Partners (1 hour) Ernesto Rodriguez, Tony Freeman, Jim Graf, CNES • Summary of ongoing US activities • Launch vehicle costs in the U.S. are on the order of ~$100M whereas costs are much lower for non-U.S. rockets. Thus, one goal of the technology sharing is to lower overall mission costs. • ITAR controls will restrict some aspects of the technology and potential sharing arrangements. During the development of the WatER proposal to ESA, some of these details were discussed • NASA HQ has made it clear that sharing missions is a priority (e.g., Alan Stern presentation at Fall 2007 AGU). • Work Breakdown (to be completed)

  5. Water-HM MeetingCNES HQ, Paris, FranceFeb 1, 2008 ITAR • Currently all documents presented at joint international meetings have to be cleared individually for ITAR restrictions • A TAA is in preparation which will allow easier communication between CNES and JPL (ETC end of April, 2008) • Letter Agreement?

  6. Water-HM MeetingCNES HQ, Paris, FranceFeb 1, 2008 Launch Vehicles • After the last of the Delta-II series, there is expected to be a gap in US launch capability in the intermediate range • This will occur in the timeframe of the launch of the Water-HM mission, which is expected to be a medium-class mission • Alternatives are: • Atlas V or Delta IV (shared launch?) • Minotaur IV • Russian Soyuz • Shared launch is not straightforward - few missions are compatible with the 78 deg inclination, 1000 km altitude of Water-HM • Some decadal survey missions could (possibly) fit the bill • ASCENDS (CO2 laser) • GACM (Atmos. Composition) • GRACE II

  7. RSDO Option* Wet Mass: 1033 kg Payload Mass: ~285 kg Bus Mass: 579 kg Propellant Mass: ~43 kg *Mass includes contingency SystemsDesign From Team X study, April 2006

  8. PRIMA Option* Wet Mass: 1091kg Payload Mass: ~285 kg Bus Mass: ~631 kg Propellant Mass: ~43 kg NOTE: Difference in mass is due to different Power design, which increases Structures mass *Mass includes contingency SystemsDesign From Team X study, April 2006

  9. 8- Instrument Concept:Instrument Suite Mass Summary I

  10. Launch Vehicle Assessment and Considerations • Current US Launch Vehicle availability for NASA procurement is limited and expensive with a lot of excess capability • NASA future Alternative Launch Program current under study may add additional options at lower cost but future is uncertain * Yellow-shaded items indicate marginal feasibility or unavailable * Estimates based upon public information

  11. Launch Vehicle Assessment and Considerations • Foreign Launch Vehicle possibilities are numerous but may be more restricted due to programmatic procurement constraints * Estimates based upon public information

  12. Launch Vehicle Assessment and Considerations • Cost reduction options to reduce overall mission cost: • Additional mission partnering • Foreign (non-US) LV • Piggyback or host other payloads on S/C • Shared launch • Orbit selection and requirements driving mass can be considered to lower required launch capability and open up lower cost LV options • Mass savings to payload (e.g., AltiKa with integrated radiometer vs Jason nadir altimeter + AMR) may also ease launch vehicle constraints.

  13. Schedule Assumptions • Project Start: FY ‘10. • Launch: FY ‘15. • ATLO Duration: 24 months. • Schedule independent of the Project partner providing the specific Project element/function. - Instruments - S/C bus - ATLO - Launch vehicle - Mission operations • Starting Point for Schedule Development: JPL Team-X SWOT Mission Study, April 2006. SWOT Project Key Strawman Milestones & Schedule

  14. Strawman SWOT Project Key Milestones & Schedule Key Milestone Strawman Dates Activity/Milestone Date • Study Start October 2007 • Mission Concept Review October 2008 • Project Mission System Review October 2009 • Preliminary Design Review (PDR) / Technology January 2011 Cutoff • Critical Design Review (CDR) August 2011 • Subsystem Fab/Test August 2011 - August 2012 • ATLO Start August 2012 • ATLO System I&T August 2012 - April 2014 • ATLO Launch Operations April 2014 - September 2014 • Launch September 2014 • Launch + 30 days Operations September 2014 - October 2014 • Operations October 2014 - September 2017

  15. Water-HM MeetingCNES HQ, Paris, FranceFeb 1, 2008 Work Breakdown (to be completed)

More Related