DocumentCode :
1863466
Title :
Solar electric propulsion for advanced planetary missions
Author :
Landis, Geoffrey A. ; Oleson, Steven ; McGuire, Melissa ; Fincannon, James ; Bury, Kristen
Author_Institution :
NASA John Glenn Res. Center, Cleveland, OH, USA
fYear :
2011
fDate :
19-24 June 2011
Abstract :
Use of solar electric propulsion can result in mass and propellant savings for future NASA missions to explore the solar system, enabling lightweight probes to targets in the solar system that have previously been out of reach. However, such electric-propulsion missions require large amounts of power, and require extremely lightweight solar arrays. The NASA Glenn COMPASS team was used to perform conceptual designs for several advanced missions, in order to develop a top-level understanding of the difficulties and the technologies needed, and the interaction of the power system with the propulsion system requirements for missions both close to, and far from, the Sun. Some near term and farther term missions analyzed include an exploration mission to a binary asteroid, a mission to land on and return a sample from the large main-belt asteroid Ceres, a mission to land a surface probe on Mercury, and a mission to the outer planet Uranus.
Keywords :
Mercury (planet); Uranus; aerospace propulsion; asteroids; electric propulsion; probes; solar power; Ceres; Mercury; NASA Glenn COMPASS team; NASA missions; Sun; Uranus; advanced planetary missions; binary asteroid; electric-propulsion missions; lightweight solar arrays; main-belt asteroid; outer planet; power system interaction; solar electric propulsion; solar system exploration; surface probe; Earth; Humans; Orbits; Power systems; Propulsion; Space vehicles; Sun;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC), 2011 37th IEEE
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
ISSN :
0160-8371
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-9966-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PVSC.2011.6186253
Filename :
6186253
Link To Document :
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