CubeSat_for_Solar_Particles

CubeSat for Solar Particles

CubeSat for Solar Particles

Nanosatellite


CubeSat for Solar Particles (CuSP) was a low-cost 6U CubeSat to orbit the Sun to study the dynamic particles and magnetic fields.[2][3] The principal investigator for CuSP is Mihir Desai, at the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in San Antonio, Texas.[2] It was launched on the maiden flight of the Space Launch System (SLS), as a secondary payload of the Artemis 1 mission on 16 November 2022.[1][4]

Quick Facts Names, Mission type ...

Following deployment from the Artemis launch adaptor, contact with the spacecraft showed that it successfully stabilized and deployed its solar arrays, but after the initial 57 minute 27 second radio contact, no further contact was established, however the search is still on. Blind commanding will be performed to stabilize the spacecraft should it still be functioning. [5] No contact has been established as of September 25, 2023 and NASA will not fund further attempts at contact.

Objective

Measuring space weather that can create a wide variety of effects at Earth, from interfering with radio communications to tripping up satellite electronics to creating electric currents in power grids, is of importance. To create a network of space weather stations would require many instruments scattered throughout space millions of miles apart, but the cost of such a system is prohibitive.[2] Though the CubeSats can only carry a few instruments, they are relatively inexpensive to launch because of their small mass and standardized design. Thus, CuSP also was intended as a test for creating a network of space science stations.[2]

The CuSP team

CuSP Spacecraft Team:[6]

Dr. Mihir Desai, PhD: Principal Investigator

Mike Epperly: Project Manager

Dr. Don George, PhD: Mission System Engineer

Chad Loeffler: Flight Software Engineer

Raymond Doty: Spacecraft Technician

Dr. Frederic Allegrini, PhD: SIS Instrument Lead

Dr. Neil Murphy, PhD: VHM Instrument Lead

Dr. Shrikanth Kanekal, PhD, MERiT Instrument Lead

Payload

This CubeSat carried three scientific instruments:[2][3]

  • The Suprathermal Ion Spectrograph (SIS), is built by the Southwest Research Institute to detect and characterize low-energy solar energetic particles.
  • Miniaturized Electron and Proton Telescope (MERiT), is built by the NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and will return counts of high-energy solar energetic particles.
  • Vector Helium Magnetometer (VHM), being built by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, will measure the strength and direction of magnetic fields.
Propulsion

The satellite features a cold gas thruster system for propulsion, attitude control (orientation) and orbital maneuvering.[7]

Spacecraft bus

The spacecraft's bus consisted of:[6]

  • SwRI Spacecraft Integrator: Design, Assembly, Integration and Test
  • SwRI SATYR Command and Data Handling Unit
  • SwRI Flight Software
  • Clyde-Space AAC Electrical Power System
    • BCR MPPT converters
    • LiPo Batteries and
    • Deployable and Fixed Solar Arrays
  • VACCO MiPS Cold Gas Thruster
  • Blue Canyon Technologies XACT ADCS with Integrated Thruster Control
  • SwRI Spacecraft Structure Mechanical and Thermal (SMT)
  • NASA JPL/SDL IRIS X-Band Deep Space Transponder
  • NASA GSFC Mission Operations Center
  • NASA Deep Space Network Ground Communication

Flight results - a qualified success

  • After a successful launch of the SLS at 1:47 am EST on November 16 2022, The Orion/ICPS performed a Trans-Lunar Injection and separated.
  • Shortly thereafter, CuSP was deployed from its launch canister in the ICPS.
  • Twenty-three minutes after deployment, DSN received Open Loop Receiver (OLR) telemetry from CuSP indicated it had booted up, detumbled, deployed solar arrays, and assumed a SAFE, Sun-pointing, orientation.
  • It was operating perfectly until...
  • OLR monitoring of the radio signal indicated that the transmitter carrier signal vanished after transmitting for 1 hour and 15 minutes.
  • No cause has been determined for this end of transmission.
  • Multiple attempts to receive additional signals from the spacecraft failed through the end of 2022. No contact was made.
  • The CuSP team fully investigated a sudden battery temperature increase and found it was a telemetry failure. This was verified by comparing redundant indications of several parameters. The redundant indications did not show the suspected excursion. This failure was proven to be the failure of a temperature monitor which saturated the ADC inputs of several signals, but not their redundant monitors fed to an independent ADC.
  • The CuSP team fully investigated an anomalous high IRIS Radio temperature. JPL IRIS engineers traced it to a failure to update a scaling equation in the SMOC EGSE. Once the updated equation was applied, the temperature fell in line with all others.
  • Plans were to make another attempt during an expected focal convergence, however, no further contact attempts were made to contact the spacecraft.
  • Official End Of Mission was declared December 2023.
  • D.I.P. CuSP (Drift In Peace)

See also

The 10 CubeSats flying in the Artemis 1 mission


References

  1. Roulette, Joey; Gorman, Steve (16 November 2022). "NASA's next-generation Artemis mission heads to moon on debut test flight". Reuters. Retrieved 16 November 2022.
  2. "Heliophysics CubeSat to Launch on NASAs SLS". NASA. 2 February 2016. Retrieved 9 March 2021. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. Messier, Doug (5 February 2016). "SwRI CubeSat to Explore Deep Space". Parabolic ARC. Retrieved 9 March 2021.
  4. Harbaugh, Jennifer (23 July 2021). "Artemis I CubeSats will study the Moon, solar radiation". NASA. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  5. Hill, Denise (December 8, 2022). "Artemis I Payload CuSP CubeSat Has Apparently Failed," NASA Press release (alternate link: SpaceRef). Retrieved 8 Dec. 2022.
  6. George, Don (21 April 2016). "The CuSP interplanetary CubeSat mission" (PDF). California Polytechnic State University.
  7. "CuSP Propulsion System". VACCO Industries. 11 August 2017. Retrieved 20 August 2022.

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