[sci.space] space news from Oct 9 AW&ST, part 2

henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) (12/04/89)

[Current news from my spies:  Pegasus will fly a dress-rehearsal captive-
carry mission Dec 7, including everything but pushing the final button.
The latest captive-carry test did turn up some minor problems, which
are being fixed.]

[The following is the rest of the extensive planetary-missions coverage
in the Oct 9 issue, hitting the high spots only.]

JPL and JSC say that morale in NASA has improved considerably since Bush's
Moon/Mars announcement.  "This is the first time since President Kennedy...
that a President has told us clearly what he wants."

JPL outlines tentative approach to a manned Mars mission:

1996	Mars Observer 2, a followon to Mars Observer
1998	Mars Global Network, two launches landing penetrators at 24 sites
2001	two sample-return missions with small rovers
2003	two missions (for redundancy) each carrying a site-reconnaissance
	orbiter and a communications orbiter
2005	major rover to potential landing site
2007	another
2009	another
2011	sample-return missions, with small rovers, to 2 best sites
2015	manned launch from space station

Safety and scientific interest will determine the best landing site, but
the best spot would be an ancient lake bed (potential for fossils) with
nearby resources (e.g. near-surface permafrost) useful to the mission.
A manned mission is considered much more effective than robot missions.
[However, I note that quite a bit of the robotic buildup in the above
schedule is only tenuously related to the manned mission.  A cynic might
suspect the existence of a contingency plan which simply scratches the
"2015" entry off the schedule...]

All of the above missions except the final manned mission are assembled
on the ground and use Titan 4 launches.

Technologies being pursued for sample-return missions include aerocapture
at Mars, intelligent autonomous landing (the Viking landers were lucky:
current estimates put the chances of a successful blind landing as low
as 60%), and autonomous rendezvous and docking in Mars orbit.  [The
above-mentioned cynic might observe that aerocapture, although certainly
useful, would probably be unnecessary with on-orbit assembly... which
seems like a rather easier technology to develop.]

Technologies seen as significant problems for rover designs are autonomous
sample retrieval (locating and picking up a rock without help, currently
a research topic only), lubricants good to -140C, and power supplies that
do not require sunlight (unreliable due to Martian dust storms) or
batteries (which have problems with the cold).  (The probable solution to
the power-supply issue is RTGs.)

CRAF's penetrator propulsion system has changed from a solid rocket to a
liquid rocket to permit postponing choice of the impact velocity until after
a first look at the comet.  The penetrator design people would really prefer
to know now whether they have to deal with fluffy snow or solid ice, but
the current design should get at least 30cm into something as hard as sea
ice, enough to get the gamma-ray spectrometer into the surface at least.
The CRAF main bus is designed to be capable of carrying two penetrators,
although the current budget is for one; everyone would prefer to send two,
partly as a hedge against trouble and partly so a successful first impact
in a "safe" area could be followed by a shot at a more interesting area.

Cassini is planned for launch in April 1996 on a Titan/Centaur.  It will
use an Earth gravity assist, with encounter 26 months after launch.  An
encounter with asteroid Maja will occur between launch and Earth encounter,
and the possibility of a second asteroid encounter is being studied.
Cassini then proceeds to Jupiter, for a gravity assist there in Feb 2000.
Saturn arrival would be early in 2002.

Cassini's Titan probe would probably take 2-3 hours to descend on its
parachute, and there is hope of both data on surface hardness (from the
probe's accelerometers) and pictures from the surface (if the probe
survives impact).  The Cassini orbiter will also do Magellan's trick
of using its main communications antenna for radar mapping of Titan's
surface.

The Deep Space Network is gritting its teeth in preparation for Magellan,
which will tie up one DSN antenna almost continuously for eight months
with 3 terabits of radar data.  Some loss of data is likely if there is
an emergency on another spacecraft or a need for maintenance downtime on
the DSN, although an extended mission could fill in such gaps.  [There
is hope for an extended mission anyway, since the eight-month primary
mission will not do quite the entire surface.]

Magellan is in good general health but does have some problems.  One is
spurious signals in the star tracker, possibly caused by solar protons
or electrostatic discharges.  The problems seem to be correlated with
solar activity.  Pioneer Venus's similar tracker has similar problems.
The spurious signals are sufficiently away from expected star positions
that Magellan's attitude-control computer rejects them, but they do mess
up the attempt to determine Magellan's attitude accurately.  This is not
a trivial problem, since Magellan has to turn back and forth on each orbit
to use the same antenna for mapping and data transmission.  Magellan will
do a star calibration on each orbit, and can miss *one* calibration without
significant problems, but successive missed calibrations could hamper
communications and mess up the radar data.  JPL is developing software
filters for the attitude-control computer to reject well-out-of-bounds
signals and pick the best of the remaining ones; it is hoped that this
will suffice.

Magellan's attitude-control computer is also running too warm, which
could shorten its life.  The expected temperature was 40C, and it's
actually 58C.  A small error has been found in the thermal models, but
it doesn't account for the whole problem.  Nobody knows quite what is
going on; possibly the solar reflectors have become degraded, but they
have not done this on other missions.  Mission plans call for the
high-gain antenna to shield the computer bay in future, which should
keep things under control.

Finally, Magellan's thrusters are too warm, especially when the big
ones have the Sun shining up their nozzles.  Damage is not expected,
but one problem is that some of the hydrazine in the fuel lines might
decompose.  The resulting gas bubbles might cause erratic early firing,
a matter of some concern because the big thrusters are vital to proper
attitude control when Magellan fires its solid motor to enter Venus
orbit.  If studies of the problem suggest that hydrazine decomposition
is likely, the thrusters will be "burped" with a short firing beforehand.
Venus encounter date is Aug 10.

Voyager 2 has been running post-Neptune calibration tests before starting
interstellar-cruise phase.  The Voyagers will still be tracked every day,
but they will be reconfigured for a 160bps data rate (compared to 21600
at Neptune) so that DSN's smaller antennas can be used.  The major limit
on their lifetime is isotope decay in the RTGs, which will run them out
of power around 2017.  There is hope that they will reach the heliopause
(the edge of the Sun's atmosphere) by then; the distance to the heliopause
is very uncertain, but current guesses give each Voyager about an 85%
chance if no equipment failures occur.

Voyager 1's cameras will be used in February to make a mosaic of the solar
system from outside.  The star background will be supplied by the wide-angle
camera, with narrow-angle images of seven of the planets inserted.  Pluto
is too dim and Mercury is too close to the Sun (which will not be included).
The planet images will show them as bright stars only, but the general
colors should be right.

JPL's Voyager team will drop to 45-50 people next year, with no further
encounters to plan and run.  (The peak at Neptune was 230.)

West Germany's Kayser-Threde company has booked four microgravity flights
on Soviet recoverable spacecraft next year.  The agreement includes new
provisions for launch-site access.  This follows a successful protein
crystal growth experiment on Resurs-F in September, run by K-T on behalf
of Intospace.  Intospace is interested in all four 1990 K-T launch slots,
although no commitment has been made yet.  Payload definition deadline
is about six months before launch.  The short lead time is one of the
most attractive features of dealing with the Soviets:  "the West German
government finally allowed us to start negotiations with the Soviets
last April, things became serious in May, and we flew in September".
The biggest obstacle has been glacially slow approval processes in the
West German government, which made it necessary for K-T to invoke the
cancellation clause in an earlier deal for a 1989 launch slot.  (The
payload space was used by France's CNES instead.)  K-T also holds
reservations on Soviet launches in 1991 and 1992.

Arianespace is revising the 1989-90 Ariane launch manifest after an
electronics problem caused a one-month slip in launch V34, carrying
an Intelsat 6.  Other recent changes also contributed to revisions.
Intelsat is shifting another Intelsat 6 to a Titan, since it wants to
use up its two Titan launch reservations quickly, and will put a later
one on Ariane in return.  An Inmarsat bird scheduled for late next year
may not be ready, and there is a strong possibility that Italsat 1, set
for next autumn, may be late.  It's unusual for Ariane to be waiting
for payloads, rather than vice-versa.
-- 
Mars can wait:  we've barely   |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
started exploring the Moon.    | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu

jchapin@Neon.Stanford.EDU (John M. Chapin) (12/04/89)

In article <1989Dec4.001327.4287@utzoo.uucp> henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) writes:
>
>JPL outlines tentative approach to a manned Mars mission:
>
>1996	Mars Observer 2, a followon to Mars Observer
>1998	Mars Global Network, two launches landing penetrators at 24 sites
>2001	two sample-return missions with small rovers
 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
	[futher dates deleted]

Lest anyone think this is far away... a six-month design
study on needed technologies and possibilities for these
rovers will start next month at Stanford.  The core
lectures (with speakers from Ames, JPL, etc) will probably
be available on videotape if anyone is interested.

The organizers are advertising heavily in places that
undergrad engineers hang out.  I take this as an
encouraging sign that they are trying to get a 
new generation interested in working on the space
program.

------------------------------------------------------------------
John Chapin		| The RSA algorithm with 100-digit primes:
Stanford Univ. CS Dept. |    My personal method for enforcing
jchapin@cs.stanford.edu |    the bill of rights
------------------------------------------------------------------

kcarroll@utzoo.uucp (Kieran A. Carroll) (12/05/89)

jchapin@Neon.Stanford.EDU (John M. Chapin) writes:

> >2001   two sample-return missions with small rovers
>  ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
> 
> Lest anyone think this is far away... a six-month design
> study on needed technologies and possibilities for these
> rovers will start next month at Stanford.

However, John, similar design studies have been carried out ever since the
early 1970's. Design studies are a necessary but not sufficient condition
for carrying out missions :-). I heard once that in the space business,
for every mission to be flown, ten preliminary-design-level studies
are carried out. And for every preliminary design, ten conceptual design
studies are commissioned.
-- 

     Kieran A. Carroll @ U of Toronto Aerospace Institute
     uunet!attcan!utzoo!kcarroll kcarroll@zoo.toronto.edu