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CubeSat Design for Solar Sail Testing Applications

This presentation outlines the goal, management structure, satellite systems, budget, future work, and conclusion of a project to design a test platform for solar sail propulsion technology. The project is sponsored by Stanford University and utilizes CubeSat designs.

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CubeSat Design for Solar Sail Testing Applications

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  1. CubeSat Design for Solar Sail Testing Applications Phillip Hempel Paul Mears Daniel Parcher Taffy Tingley The University of Texas at Austin October 11, 2001

  2. Presentation Outline Project Goal Management Structure Satellite Systems Budget Future Work Conclusion

  3. Project Goal • Design a Test Platform for Solar Sail Propulsion Technology • Measure Thrust • Measure Solar Sail Efficiency

  4. Management Structure • Daniel Parcher • Project Manager • Tracking Systems Department Head • Electronics Department Head • Phillip Hempel • Mechanical Systems Department Head • Taffy Tingley • Propulsion Systems Department Head • Paul Mears • Orbital Trajectory Department Head

  5. CubeSat Project Background • Sponsored by Stanford University • Utilizes picosatellite satellite Designs that perform some scientific task • Different CubeSat launches provide different initial conditions

  6. Constraints • CubeSat Prescribed Constraints • 10cm Sided Cube • 1 Kg Weight • Timing System to Delay Power-On • Space-Flown Materials • Adopted Constraints (for Simplicity and Reliability) • No Attitude Control • No Powered Systems (except required Timer) • No Communications Systems

  7. Presentation Outline Project Overview Management Structure Satellite Systems Budget Future Work Conclusion

  8. CubeSat Required Systems • Timer • RDAS accelerometer/timer • Voltage outputs to trigger system events • Casing • Aluminum • Kill Switch • Attached CC reflectors

  9. Tracking / Communcations • No Satellite Communication • Tracking performed with corner cube reflectors • determine position, rotation, acceleration • Corner cube reflectors to be supplied by Banner Engineering Corp.

  10. Mechanical Systems Phillip Hempel

  11. Satellite Components • Frame/ Corner Cube Reflectors • Kill Switch/ Timer • Sail • Inflation Capsule • Capillaries • Hardening Strips

  12. Frame • 10 cm Sided Cube • Corner Cubes Panels to be Placed on Sides

  13. Corner Cube Reflectors • Flat-Plate Reflectors • Attached to Frame • Released Prior to Inflation • In the Plane of the Solar Sail

  14. Kill Switch/Timer • Kill Switch Triggered by Release • Begins Timer Sequence • Controls All Timing Sequences

  15. Solar Sail Properties • Aluminized Mylar • Circular Shape • Area of 100 m^2 Example of Aluminized Mylar Structure

  16. Capillaries • Tubes attached to the surface of the solar sail • Capillaries will be placed placed strategically for structural rigidity • Tubes are inflated by nitrogen from capsule Total Length = 272 ft. Diameter = 0.5 in

  17. Inflation Capsule • 7.6 cm Long • 3.8 cm Diameter • 86 cm^3 Volume • 60.5 psi • Placed in the Center of the CubeSat

  18. Hardening Strips • Thin tape-like strips • Strips will be placed strategically in a spider web pattern on the sail • Strips harden with solar radiation exposure Total Strip Length = 308 ft.

  19. Cut-Away CubeSat

  20. Sequence of Events • P-Pod Release/ Deactivate Kill Switch • Waiting Period • Side Panels Unlock • Inflation Begins • Inflation Ends/ Rigidization Occurs • Solar sail reaches final shape

  21. Propulsion Taffy Tingley

  22. Solar Sail Material Selection Solar Blade Solar Sail Encounter Satellite

  23. Solar Sail Material Selection Cosmos I Star of Tolerance Satellite

  24. Aluminized Mylar • High Strength to Weight Ratio • Tested • Cheap! • Double Reflective

  25. ABAQUS

  26. Finite Element Design • Monitor regions where high stress occurs • Add tear strip or tension line to sail • Monitor rigidity • Model several perturbations and situations • Perform thermal analysis • Monitor effects of additional components • All in 3-D

  27. Future Propulsion Work • Integrate deployment apparatus into FE model • Install Tear Strips into FE model • Perform Thermal Analysis

  28. Orbit Simulation Paul Mears

  29. Solar Radiation Pressure • Electromagnetic radiation flux • Photon energy • Momentum exchange produces force per unit area ΔV

  30. Sail Thrust Function of: T = f (A, S, e, q) where A = sail area S = Power (scaled Watt) e = reflectivity q = angle of incidence

  31. -Fr Fi θ FT Fr ŜN Sail Thrust Vector • Thrust Acts in the direction Normal to the Sail • Sail Normal makes an angle q with the Sun Position Vector • Thrust is generated by Incidental and Reflected Light

  32. 4-Body Problem ECEF Coordinate System (x, y, z) • Earth (2) Sun (3) Moon • (4) Satellite (T) Thrust

  33. Forces on the Satellite The gravitational forces of all the planets effect the satellite, as well as thrust FBD: Satellite i = 1, 2, 3

  34. Injection will occur at perigee Orbit will be highly elliptic with apogee at 42000km Resulting Orbital Elements Rp = 7178.14 km Ra = 48619.23 km Vp = 10.19 km/s2 Va = 3.04 km/s2 e = 0.743 a = 55797.37 km Initial Conditions of Orbit

  35. Orbit Propagation: Perturbing Forces Earth Forces Only Earth, Sun, Moon Forces

  36. Orbit Propagation with Thrust All Gravitational Forces plus Thrust Earth, Sun, Moon Forces

  37. Future Work in Orbit Simulation Rotating Thrust Vector

  38. Presentation Outline Project Overview Management Structure Satellite Systems Budget Future Work Conclusion

  39. Budget • Personnel - $15,633 • Testing - $ 2,000 • Materials - $ 5,000 • Launch - $50,000 • Total - $72,653

  40. Future Work • Hardware integration • Part size and weight definition and orientation within the satellite • Deployment system timing • Finite element analysis • Orbital simulation • Rotating thrust vector definition • Orbital trajectories simulation

  41. Conclusion • PaperSat is developing a picosatellite design for CubeSat • Design will test solar sail propulsion technology • Design will not incorporate attitude control • Deployment system uses compressed gas • Solar sail will be reflective on both sides • Position, acceleration, and orientation will be measured from ground stations http://www.ae.utexas.edu/design/papersat/

  42. Acknowledgements • Dr. Wallace Fowler • Dr. Cesar Ocampo • Dr. Eric Becker • Meredith Fitzpatrick • Previous CubeSat Design Groups

  43. Questions?

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