1 / 13

Dorrie Byford Week 1: January 18 th , 2007

Dorrie Byford Week 1: January 18 th , 2007. Communications Group Leader / Autonomous Rendezvous Team Member / Website Designer Satellite Requirements and Autonomous Rendezvous Solutions. Satellites and Antennas. Satellites: Similar in size and capability to TDRSS Already in place

zoe
Télécharger la présentation

Dorrie Byford Week 1: January 18 th , 2007

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. Dorrie ByfordWeek 1: January 18th, 2007 Communications Group Leader / Autonomous Rendezvous Team Member / Website Designer Satellite Requirements and Autonomous Rendezvous Solutions

  2. Satellites and Antennas • Satellites: Similar in size and capability to TDRSS • Already in place • Good Earth coverage • Has necessary bandwidth requirements • Already proven • Antennas: Similar in size and capability to ISS Ku-Band and S-band • Has required bandwidth • Already proven • Minimum 5 satellites required • Assumes use of current TDRSS • 3 Mars orbiting in 60 deg triangle • 2 in large, elliptical halo orbit relatively close to Earth • Ku-band and S-band antennas on every vehicle, man and unmanned

  3. Autonomous Rendezvous • Well proven • 1998/1999 • Future JAXA vehicles • Wide range • 500m – 2m • Minimum mass increase • Most capabilities already required • Software is basically mass-less

  4. Back-up Slides

  5. TDRSS Info

  6. Mars Orbiting Satellites

  7. Halo Orbit (view from Earth)

  8. HDTV Info • 1 HDTV channel = 270 Mpbs • Using MPEG-2 Encoding • 1 HDTV channel = 5-10 Mpbs • Satellites can send ~200 channels at once • Using MPEG-2 Encoding, 50 Mpbs (current Ku-band downlink rate) is more than enough

  9. S-Band • Shuttle specs: • Voice: 32 kbps • Commands: 8 kbps • Telemetry: 64 kbps • Forward link • High: 72 kpbs • Low: 32 kbps • Return link • High: 192 kpbs • Low: 96 kpbs

  10. Ku-Band • Same specs as S-band • Additional 50 Mpbs for video • Can be used as back-up system for rendezvous

  11. NASDA RVR • NASDA (now JAXA) created and tested Rendezvous Laser Radar (RVR) in late 90s • Tested on two-piece satellite • Named Chaser and Target • Multiple approaches from distances of 2 m to 12 km • Used GPS outside 500 m, RVR from 500 m to 2 m, and proximity operations inside 2 m

  12. RVR Results • All rendezvous performed successfully • RVR max error from 500 m – 2 m: .00372 m • RVR max error from 2 m – dock: .07 m • Specs of test satellite: • 2900 kg (both pieces combined) • Chaser: 12 m^3 • Target: 1.7 m^3

  13. Resources • http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/T/TDRSS.html • http://www.astronautix.com/craft/tdrs.htm • http://www.howstuffworks.com/satellite-tv2.htm • http://spaceflightnow.com/shuttle/sts092/status2.html • http://science.ksc.nasa.gov/shuttle/technology/sts-newsref/sts-ovcomm.html • Mokuno, Masaaki, Isao Kawano, Takashi Suzuki. “In-Orbit Demonstration of Rendezvous Laser Radar for Unmanned Autonomous Rendezvous Docking.” IEEE Transactions on Aerospace and Electronic Systems, April, 2004. Vol. 40, Issue 2, pp 617-626.

More Related