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Design Development of a Stable, Lightweight, Tall and Self-Deploying Lunar TowerDeployable composite booms with spaceflight heritage are being investigated at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Langley Research Center (LaRC) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Space Resources Workshop for their potential to be vertically deployed in the lunar gravity field, in support of the NASA Artemis campaign. This paper reports new design development results—after the original presentation at the NASA 2020 BIG Idea Challenge—for a 16.5-meter-tall, compact, self-deploying composite tower intended to support the exploration of lunar permanently shadowed regions by nearby robotic assets or humans. Possible applications include vertical solar arrays and the provision of elevated lines-of-sight to science or engineering
payloads, in support of nearby targets operating in areas of interest that may be hard to reach. Useful elevated payloads include radio repeaters, remote sensing and imaging, navigation and power beaming systems. However, while these lightweight rollable booms have an excellent height to mass ratio, they typically exhibit axial curvature upon deployment resulting in appreciable lateral dead-load deflection of the tip mass relative to the tower base. This static deflection increases with tower height and tip mass, not only constraining the value delivered by the tower but also endangering its integrity. To develop a competitive, lightweight deployable composite boom tower, a capability to correct static deflections during and after deployment will be required. In this paper, a deployable guy wire stability system will be presented for the MIT / LaRC self-erecting composite boom lunar tower that provides real time measurements, maintains tension both actively (during deployment) and passively (post-deployment), and can serve as a reconfigurable platform to test and trade alternative stability system configurations, such as with added spreaders inspired by sailing boat masts. Using a calibrated photogrammetry system, the natural lateral deflection of the boom tip relative to the boom base at different deployed heights was recorded for different configurations. With real-time force measurements it was found that tensioned guy wires can significantly reduce the static tip deflection of a deployable composite boom under dead load and can dampen a dynamic oscillation in under a minute. It was also found that control authority is greatest where it is needed most, i.e., for the lever arm closest to being opposite the direction of deflection. For a tower height of at least 11 m and spreader length of at least 60 cm, a solution of differential tension in all three arms exists and, in principle, provides sufficient control authority to correct or significantly reduce boom tip deflections. Notably, natural deflections occur almost entirely normal to the seams of the boom cross-section, but the natural boom tip lateral deflection under dead load upon deployment was approximately 5% of boom deployed length, exceeding the manufacturing acceptance specification of 1%. Ongoing and future work includes the further investigation towards mitigating manufacture-caused lateral deflection, trading of alternative guy wire system designs, as well as the design development of a second-generation tower incorporating a more capable boom design with the learnings from the proof-of-concept system presented here.
Document ID
20230000447
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Alex S Miller
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
George Lordos
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Paul Portmann
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Avril Studstill
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Wilhelm Schoeman
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Joshua Rorhbaugh
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Christian Williams
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Emma Rutherford
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
John Z Zhang
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Palak B Patel
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Olivier de Weck
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Jeffrey Hoffman
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Benjamin C Martell
(SpaceX (United States) Hawthorne, California, United States)
Natasha Stamler
(Eindhoven University of Technology Eindhoven, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands)
Juan M Fernandez
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
January 11, 2023
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing and Performance
Meeting Information
Meeting: 44th International IEEE Aerospace Conference
Location: Big Sky, MT
Country: US
Start Date: March 4, 2023
End Date: March 11, 2023
Sponsors: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 969115.04.28.23.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
deployable composite boom
lunar tower
rigging system
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