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The NASA Solar Cruiser Mission - Solar Sail Propulsion Enabling Heliophysics MissionsSolar Cruiser is a Small Satellite Technology Demonstration Mission (TDM) to mature solar sail propulsion technology to enable near-term, high-priority breakthrough science missions as defined in the Solar and Space Physics Decadal Survey. Solar sails have the potential to provide high ΔV for many types of missions. Solar sails are large, mirror-like structures made of a lightweight material that reflects sunlight to propel the spacecraft. The continuous solar photon pressure provides thrust with no need for the heavy, expendable propellants used by conventional chemical and electric propulsion systems. Solar Cruiser will demonstrate a “sailcraft” platform with pointing control and attitude stability comparable to traditional platforms, upon which a new class of Heliophysics missions may fly. It will show sailcraft operation (acceleration, navigation, station keeping, heliocentric plane change) scalability of sail technologies such as the boom, membrane, and deployer to enable more demanding missions, such as high inclination solar imaging. Solar Cruiser will launch as a secondary payload with NASA’s Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) in early 2025. The sailcraft will separate from the launch vehicle on a near-L1 trajectory (Sun-Earth Lagrangian Point 1; sunward of L1 along the Sun-Earth Line) and complete its primary mission in 11 months or less.
Document ID
20220008217
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Les Johnson
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, United States)
Jason Everett
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, United States)
David McKenzie
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, United States)
Daniel Tyler
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, United States)
Darren Wallace
(Marshall Space Flight Center Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, United States)
Jeff Wilson
(Jacobs Huntsville, AL)
Jeff Newmark
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Dana Turse
(Redwire Space Clover Basin, Longmont, CO)
Matthew Canella
(Ball Aerospace Corporation Boulder, Colorado, United States)
Max Feldman
(Ball Aerospace Corporation Boulder, Colorado, United States)
Date Acquired
May 25, 2022
Subject Category
Spacecraft Propulsion And Power
Meeting Information
Meeting: Small Satellite Conference
Location: Logan, Utah
Country: US
Start Date: August 6, 2022
End Date: August 11, 2022
Sponsors: Utah State University
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 745081.01.11
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
Solar Sail
Heliophysics
Artificial Halo Orbit
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