DocumentCode
576017
Title
Nanosatellites for earth environmental monitoring: The MicroMAS project
Author
Blackwell, W. ; Allen, G. ; Galbraith, C. ; Hancock, T. ; Leslie, R. ; Osaretin, I. ; Retherford, L. ; Scarito, M. ; Semisch, C. ; Shields, M. ; Silver, M. ; Toher, D. ; Wight, K. ; Miller, D. ; Cahoy, K. ; Erickson, N.
Author_Institution
Lincoln Lab., Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Lexington, MA, USA
fYear
2012
fDate
22-27 July 2012
Firstpage
206
Lastpage
209
Abstract
The Micro-sized Microwave Atmospheric Satellite (MicroMAS) is a 3U cubesat (34×10×10 cm, 4.5 kg) hosting a passive microwave spectrometer operating near the 118.75-GHz oxygen absorption line. The focus of the first MicroMAS mission (hereafter, MicroMAS-1) is to observe convective thunderstorms, tropical cyclones, and hurricanes from a near-equatorial orbit at approximately 500-km altitude. A MicroMAS flight unit is currently being developed in anticipation of a 2014 launch. A parabolic reflector is mechanically rotated as the spacecraft orbits the earth, thus directing a cross-track scanned beam with FWHM beamwidth of 2.4-degrees, yielding an approximately 20-km diameter footprint at nadir incidence from a nominal altitude of 500 km. Radiometric calibration is carried out using observations of cold space, the earth´s limb, and an internal noise diode that is weakly coupled through the RF front-end electronics. A key technology feature is the development of an ultra-compact intermediate frequency processor module for channelization, detection, and A-to-D conversion. The antenna system and RF front-end electronics are highly integrated and miniaturized. A MicroMAS-2 mission is currently being planned using a multi-band spectrometer operating near 118 and 183 GHz in a sun-synchronous orbit of approximately 800-km altitude. A HyMAS-1 (Hyperspectral Microwave Atmospheric Satellite) mission with approximately 50 channels near 118 and 183 GHz is also being planned. In this paper, the mission concept of operations will be discussed, the radiometer payload will be described, and the spacecraft subsystems (avionics, power, communications, attitude determination and control, and mechanical structures) will be summarized.
Keywords
artificial satellites; atmospheric measuring apparatus; thunderstorms; 3U cubesat; A-to-D conversion; Earth environmental monitoring; Earth limb; FWHM beamwidth; HyMAS-1 mission; Hyperspectral Microwave Atmospheric Satellite; MicroMAS flight unit; MicroMAS mission; MicroMAS project; MicroMAS-2 mission; Microsized Microwave Atmospheric Satellite; RF front-end electronics; convective thunderstorms; cross-track scanned beam; hurricanes; internal noise diode; multiband spectrometer; nadir incidence; nanosatellites; near-equatorial orbit; oxygen absorption line; parabolic reflector; passive microwave spectrometer; radiometer payload; radiometric calibration; spacecraft orbits; spacecraft subsystems; tropical cyclones; Geoscience; Microwave radiometry; Microwave technology; Orbits; Satellite broadcasting; Satellites; Space vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2012 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Munich
ISSN
2153-6996
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1160-1
Electronic_ISBN
2153-6996
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2012.6350910
Filename
6350910
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