Thursday, August 03, 2023
America's Next Asteroid Explorer Spread Its Wings on the Ground One Last Time Before Launch...
NASA / Isaac Watson
Huge Solar Arrays Permanently Installed on NASA’s Psyche Spacecraft (News Release)
The Psyche mission is speeding towards its October 5 launch date, preparing for the last of its launch-preparation milestones.
Robotically unfurling in a clean room near NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, the Psyche spacecraft’s jumbo solar arrays were tested and permanently installed on the orbiter in preparation for its 2.5 billion-mile (4 billion-kilometer) journey to study a metal-rich asteroid. The launch period opens on October 5.
After passing the deployment test, the twin wings were re-stowed and will remain tucked away on the sides of the orbiter until the spacecraft leaves Earth. Psyche is scheduled to reach its destination – a mysterious asteroid of the same name, in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter – in July 2029.
Then the spacecraft will orbit the asteroid from various altitudes for 26 months to gather images and other data.
Scientists hope that learning about the asteroid, which may be part of a core of a planetesimal (a building block of a planet), will tell us more about planetary cores and Earth’s own formation.
This final installation of the solar arrays took place at Astrotech Space Operations, near Kennedy. The arrays were deployed during testing last year at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
At 800 square feet (75 square meters), the five-panel, cross-shaped solar arrays are the largest ever deployed at JPL.
With the arrays unfurled in flight, the spacecraft will be about the size of a singles tennis court.
Although they will produce more than 20 kilowatts of power when the spacecraft is near Earth, the solar arrays are primarily designed to work in the low light of deep space. The asteroid Psyche is so far from the Sun that even these massive arrays will generate just over 2 kilowatts of power at that distance.
That’s only a little more power than a hair dryer uses but is ample energy to meet Psyche’s electrical needs, including running science instruments, telecommunications, equipment that controls the orbiter’s temperature, and the spacecraft’s superefficient solar electric propulsion engines. The system’s thrusters use electromagnetic fields to accelerate and push out charged atoms, or ions, of the neutral gas xenon.
The expelled ions create the thrust that pushes Psyche through space and emit a blue glow.
Source: NASA.Gov
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NASA / JPL - Caltech / ASU
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Psyche
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