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Science of Opportunity: Heliophysics on the FASTSAT Mission and STP-S26The FASTSAT spacecraft, which was launched on November 19, 2010 on the DoD STP-S26 mission, carries three instruments developed in joint collaboration by NASA GSFC and the US Naval Academy: PISA, TTl, and MINI_ME.I,1 As part of a rapid-development, low-cost instrument design and fabrication program, these instruments were a perfect match for FASTSAT, which was designed and built in less than one year. These instruments, while independently developed, provide a collaborative view of important processes in the upper atmosphere relating to solar and energetic particle input, atmospheric response, and ion outflow. PISA measures in-situ irregularities in electron number density, TIl provides limb measurements of the atomic oxygen temperature profile with altitude, and MINI-ME provides a unique look at ion populations by a remote sen sing technique involving neutral atom imaging. Together with other instruments and payloads on STP-S26 such as the NSF RAX mission, FalconSat-5, and NanoSail-D (launched as a tertiary payload from FASTSAT), these instruments provide a valuable "constellation of opportunity" for following the now of energy and charged and neutral particles through the upper atmosphere. Together, and for a small fraction of the price of a major mission, these spacecraft will measure the energetic electrons impacting the upper atmosphere, the ions leaving it, and the large-scale plasma and neutral response to these energy inputs. The result will be a new model for maximizing scientific return from multiple small, distributed payloads as secondary payloads on a larger launch vehicle.
Document ID
20120012568
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Rowland, Douglas E.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD, United States)
Collier, Michael R.
Sigwarth, John B.
Jones, Sarah L.
Hill, Joanne K.
Benson, Robert
Choi, Michael
Chornay, Dennis
Cooper, John
Feng, Steven
Gill, Nathaniel
Goodloe, Colby
Han, Lawrence
Hancock, Holly
Hunsaker, Floyd
Jones, Noble
Keller, John W.
Klenzing, Jeffrey
(Siena Coll. Londonville, NY, United States)
Kleyner, Igor
Moore, Tom
Ogilvie, Keith
Boudreaux, Mark
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Casas, Joseph
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Myre, David
(Naval Academy Annapolis, MD, United States)
Smith, Billy
(Naval Academy Annapolis, MD, United States)
Date Acquired
August 26, 2013
Publication Date
March 5, 2011
Publication Information
Publisher: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Subject Category
Spacecraft Instrumentation And Astrionics
Report/Patent Number
GSFC.JA.01239.2012
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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