In a first, NASA's Mars probe taking mini satellites to deep space
BY Agencies6 May 2018 5:33 PM GMT
Agencies6 May 2018 5:33 PM GMT
Washington: A pair of briefcase-sized spacecraft known as CubeSats are making their way into deep space for the first time, sharing a ride with NASA's InSight Mars lander.
The US space agency has received radio signals indicating that the first-ever CubeSats headed to deep space are alive and well. Engineers will now be performing a series of checks before both CubeSats enter their cruise to deep space.
Mars Cube One (MarCO) is a pair spacecraft that launched along with NASA's InSight Mars lander on May 5 from Vandenberg Air Force Base in Central California.
InSight is a scientific mission that will probe the Red Planet's deep interior for the first time; the name stands for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport.
The twin MarCO CubeSats are on their own separate mission: rather than collecting science, they will follow the InSight lander on its cruise to Mars, testing out miniature spacecraft technology along the way.
Both were programmed to unfold their solar panels soon after launch, followed by several opportunities to radio back their health.
"Both MarCO-A and B say 'Polo!' It's a sign that the little sats are alive and well," said Andy Klesh, chief engineer for the MarCO mission at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in the US which built the twin spacecraft.
The computers inside each MarCO CubeSat have not been turned on since being tested at California Polytechnic State University in the US in mid-March, where they were prepared for launch.
Each spacecraft had to do a lot of things right by itself for the team to hear a signal: batteries had to retain enough charge for the spacecraft to deploy their solar arrays, stabilise their attitude, turn toward the Sun and turn on their radios.
A couple of weeks will be spent assessing how the MarCO CubeSats are performing. If they survive the radiation of space and function as planned, they will fly over the Red Planet during InSight's entry, descent and landing in November.
They each have a special antenna to relay InSight's vital signs during the infamous "Seven Minutes of Terror," the crucial phase which has claimed the majority of humanity's probes sent to land on the Red Planet.
CubeSats are a kind of boxy satellite invented to teach engineering students how to build spacecraft. Today, they offer access to space for private companies and research institutions.
They are just one kind of "SmallSat," which includes a broad range organised by weight class. CubeSats are generally under 15 kilogrammes, and can weigh as little as about 2.5 kilogrammes.
They are distinctively modular, which makes it easier to buy "plug-in" parts rather than custom-design every part of the spacecraft.
NASA is taking the opportunity to test several experimental systems with MarCO. Their radios, folding high-gain antennas, attitude control and propulsion systems are all included to prove new technologies in deep space.
"A lot of work went into designing and testing these components so that they could survive the trip to Mars and relay data during InSight's landing. But our broader goal is to learn more about how to adapt CubeSat technologies for future deep-space missions," said Joel Krajewski of JPL, MarCO's project manager.
When InSight arrives on Mars in November, it won't rely on MarCO for sending landing data back to Earth.
That job will go to NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, as well as several Earth-based astronomy telescopes. However, the MarCO mission could help prove the potential for CubeSats as a kind of bring-your-own "black box" for future NASA missions.
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