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Two-Dimensional Planetary Surface LandersWe proposed to develop a new landing approach that significantly reduces development time and obviates the most complicated, most expensive, and highest-risk phase of a landing mission. The concept is a blanket- or carpet-like two-dimensional (2D) lander (~1-m × 1-m surface area and <1-cm thick) with a low mass/drag ratio, which allows the lander to efficiently shed its approach velocity and provide a more robust structure for landing integrity. The form factor of these landers allows dozens to be stacked on a single spacecraft for transport and distributed en masse to the surface. Lander surfaces will be populated on both sides by surface-mount, low-profile sensors and instruments, surface-mount telecom, solar cells, batteries, processors, and memory. Landers will also incorporate thin flexible electronics, made possible in part by printable electronics technology. The mass and size of these highly capable technologies further reduces the required stiffness and mass of the lander structures to the point that compliant, lightweight, robust landers capable of passive landings are possible. This capability avoids the costly, complex use of rockets, radar, and associated structure and control systems. This approach is expected to provide an unprecedented science payload mass to spacecraft mass ratio of approximately 80% (estimated based on current knowledge). This compared to ~1% for Pathfinder, ~17% for MER, and 22% for MSL rovers. Clearly, one difference is rovers vs. a lower capability lander. An outcome of the Phase I study is a clear roadmap for near-term demonstration and long-term technology development.
Document ID
20180008681
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other
Authors
Hemmati, Hamid
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
Willis, Peter
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
Roberts, Tom
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
Castillo, Julie
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
Sengupta, Anita
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
McElrath, Tim
(Jet Propulsion Lab. Cape Canaveral, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
December 20, 2018
Publication Date
November 2, 2018
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
HQ-E-DAA-TN62840
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
Landers
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