Ficheiro:Models of Proba-3 designs (26205611893).jpg

Ficheiro orixinal(3.187 × 2.125 píxeles; tamaño do ficheiro: 1,08 MB; tipo MIME: image/jpeg)

Resumo

Descrición

The design evolution of ESA’s Proba-3 double satellite is shown by this trio of 3D-printed models, each pair – from left to right – produced after successive development milestones.

“These paired models, <a href="http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Engineering_Technology/Ten_ways_3D_printing_could_change_space" rel="nofollow">3D printed in plastic</a>, were not made for show,” explains Agnes Mestreau-Garreau, ESA’s project manager.

“Instead, they’re used almost daily. Because <a href="http://www.esa.int/spaceinvideos/Videos/2015/03/Proba-3_Dancing_with_the_stars" rel="nofollow">Proba-3 will be the first precision formation-flying mission</a> – with the two satellites flying in tandem– these models help the team to visualise their orientation, as well as to explain the mission easily to people. So the models have ended up somewhat battered as a result.

“The first model set was printed after our System Requirements Review, followed by our Preliminary Design Review and now Mission Consolidation Milestone – with consequent changes in mission mass, volume and design details.“

The latest member of ESA’s experimental Proba minisatellite family, Proba-3’s paired satellites will manoeuvre relative to each other with millimetre and fraction-of-a-degree precision, intended to serve as the virtual equivalent of a giant structure in space and so open up a whole new way of running space missions.

As has become traditional with Proba missions, the success of Proba-3’s technology will be proven through acquiring high-quality scientific data. In this case, the smaller ‘occulter’ satellite will blot out the Sun’s fiery disc as viewed by the larger ‘coronagraph’ satellite, revealing mysterious regions of our parent star’s ghostly ‘corona’, or outer atmosphere.

When in Sun-observing mode, the two satellites will maintain formation exactly 150 m apart, lined up with the Sun so the occulter casts a shadow across the face of the coronagraph, blocking out solar glare to come closer to the Sun’s fiery surface than ever before, other than during frustratingly brief terrestrial solar eclipses.

The challenge is in keeping the satellites safely controlled and correctly positioned relative to each other. This will be accomplished using various new technologies, including bespoke formation-flying software, GPS information, intersatellite radio links, startrackers, and optical visual sensors and optical metrologies for close-up manoeuvring.

Fifteen ESA Member States are participating in the Proba-3 consortium, with SENER in Spain as prime contractor for the satellite platforms and Centre Spatial de Liège in Belgium as prime contractor for the coronagraph.

“This grouping includes several of the newer ESA Member States, including the Czech Republic, Poland and Romania,” adds Agnes.

“It is a strength of this kind of small but ambitious mission that new entrants to the space sector can find important industrial roles to play on a more flexible basis than in some larger-scale programmes.”

<a href="http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Space_Engineering_Technology/Proba_Missions/About_Proba-3" rel="nofollow">Proba-3</a>’s next milestone will be the Payload Critical Design Review for its coronagraph, expected in the autumn followed by the System Critical Design Review for the mission. The two satellites will be stacked together for launch in 2019 before separating in orbit.

Credit: ESA-G. Porter <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/igo/" rel="nofollow">CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO</a>
Data
Orixe Models of Proba-3 designs
Autoría European Space Agency

Licenza

w:gl:Creative Commons
recoñecemento compartir igual
Este ficheiro está licenciado baixo a licenza Creative Commons recoñecemento compartir igual xenérico 2.0.
Vostede é libre de:
  • compartir – copiar, distribuír e difundir a obra
  • facer obras derivadas – adaptar a obra
Baixo as seguintes condicións:
  • recoñecemento – Debe indicar a debida atribución de autoría, fornecer unha ligazón á licenza e indicar se se realizaron cambios. Pode facer isto de calquera forma razoable, mais non nunha forma que indique que quen posúe a licenza apoia ou subscribe o seu uso da obra.
  • compartir igual – Se altera, transforma ou amplía este contido, debe publicar as súas contribucións baixo a mesma licenza ou outra compatible á orixinal.
Esta imaxe foi publicada no Flickr por europeanspaceagency en https://flickr.com/photos/37472264@N04/26205611893. A imaxe foi revisada o 11 de decembro de 2020 polo robot FlickreviewR 2 e confirmou ter licenza baixo os termos de cc-by-sa-2.0.

11 de decembro de 2020

Pés de foto

Engada unha explicación dunha liña do representa este ficheiro

Elementos retratados neste ficheiro

representa a

Um valor sem um elemento no repositório Wikidata

Historial do ficheiro

Prema nunha data/hora para ver o ficheiro tal e como estaba nese momento.

Data/HoraMiniaturaDimensiónsUsuarioComentario
actual11 de decembro de 2020 ás 10:07Miniatura da versión ás 10:07 do 11 de decembro de 20203.187 × 2.125 (1,08 MB)Eyes RogerTransferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons

A seguinte páxina usa este ficheiro:

Uso global do ficheiro

Os seguintes wikis empregan esta imaxe:

Metadatos