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Demonstrations & Science Experiment (DSX) 05 Mar 2009 Gregory P. Ginet Space Vehicles Directorate Air Force Research Laboratory DSX Outline • • • • • Introduction Satellite & Payloads Orbital Coverage CONOPS Status & Summary DSX Mission Objectives • Nominal orbit: 6000 k x 12000 k,125 deg incl, launch ~ 2012 • Three science experiments: 1) Wave-particle interactions (WPIx) • Determine efficiency of injecting VLF into space plasmas in situ • Determine global distribution of natural & man-made ELF-VLF waves • Characterize and quantify wave-particle interactions 2) Space weather (SWx) • Map MEO radiation & plasma environment • Diagnose in-situ environment for wave generation experiments 3) Space environment effects (SFx) • Quantify effects of MEO environment on new technologies • Determine physical mechanisms responsible for material breakdown DSX Wave-Particle Interactions Particles mirroring below 100 km are “lost” Particle pitch-angle ELF/VLF Waves Control Particle Lifetimes Electromagnetic waves L shell = distance/RE Electromagnetic waves in the Very Low Frequency (VLF) range (3-30 kHz) scatter and accelerate radiation belt electrons through cyclotron resonance interactions Waves from CRRES (1990) DSX Space Weather Forecasting Transmitters Diffusion coefficient along field lines Natural VLF Wave power in the magnetosphere Diffusion coefficients along field lines Distribution of Resonant Wave Vectors Wave-particle resonance condition Diffusion coefficients = sum over resonances Particle lifetime along field lines (approximate 1D solution) Complex dependence on energy, frequency, and pitch angle f X ,t 1 = t ij f X ,t D X i X j X i Xj Full 3D global, time dependent particle distributions Xi = (L, E, ) Quantitative understanding of VLF wave power distribution & resultant wave-particle interactions is crucial for radiation belt specification & forecasting DSX VLF Injection Efficiency Isheath VLF antennas in plasma are very different than in vacuo: • Sheaths form around elements due to free electrons & ions • High-power levels can heat local plasmas • Far-field radiation a result of complex current distribution + + + - - - >0 + + Analytic impendence theory with 1-D sheath & empirical tuning (UM/Lowell) Dynamic 3-D “electrostatic” simulations with NASCAP-2K (SAIC) 3-D FDFD electromagnetic simulations with PML’s (Stanford) Linear-response cold plasma theory in far-field (Stanford, UM/Lowell, AFRL, etc.) + Iantenna - - - - + 1-D equivalent circuit (UMass/Lowell) Validation with LAPD in laboratory plasmas (UCLA) Electrostatic potential (Volts) +300 +10 -10 VLF loop antenna -10000 3-D electrostatic antenna simulation (NASCAP-2k, SAIC) - - 0> Several modeling approaches being taken • • • • + + 3-D FDFD antenna simulation (Stanford) Current models predict wildly different scaling of power output with frequency & antenna length - DSX will provide validation DSX Current Standard Models (AE8 & AP8) Example: Highly Elliptic Orbit (HEO) Example: Medium-Earth Orbit (MEO) J. Fennell, SEEWG 2003 Behind 0.23” Al Dose Rate (Rads/s) (>2.5 MeV e ; >135 MeV p) L (RE) HEO dose measurements show that current radiation models (AE8 & AP8) over estimate the dose for thinner shielding Omni. Flux (#/(cm2 s Mev) Model differences depend on energy: For MEO orbit (L=2.2), #years to reach 100 kRad: • Quiet conditions (NASA AP8, AE8) : 88 yrs • Active conditions (CRRES active) : 1.1 yrs AE8 & AP8 under estimate the dose for 0.23’’ shielding L (RE) L (RE) L (RE) L (RE) DSX Where is the 20 dB? Starks, et al. (2008) Abel & Thorne (1998) ≠ Ground transmitter VLF needed in the inner magnetosphere… but where is it? Radiation Belt Remediation DSX Satellite AC Magnetometer – Tri-axial search coils For Official Use Only Wave-Particle Interactions (WPIx) – VLF transmitter & receivers – Loss cone imager Space Weather (SWx) – 5 particle & plasma detectors 8m Z-Axis Booms • VLF E-field Rx Space Environmental Effects (SFx) – NASA Space Environment Testbed – AFRL effects experiment ESPA Ring • Interfaces between EELV & satellite Loss Cone Imager - High Sensitivity Telescope - Fixed Sensor Head Y-Axis Booms VLF Transmitter & Receivers - Broadband receiver - Transmitter & tuning unit • VLF E-field Tx/Rx 8m DC Vector Magnetometer DSX Wave-Particle Interactions Payload • Receiver (Stanford, Lockheed-Martin, NASA/Goddard): – Three search coil magnetometers (3 B components) – Frequency range: 100 – 50 kHz – Sensitivity 1.0e-16 V2/m2/Hz (E) & 1.0e-11 nT2/Hz (B) Transmitter control & tuning units amp - Pre - Ex - Ey - Bx - By - Bz trol - Con – Two dipole antennas (2 E components) • Transmitter (UMass Lowell, SWRI, Lockheed-Martin): NASA GSFC – 3 – 50 kHz at up to 500 W (900 W at end of life) – 50 – 750 kHz at 1W (local electron density) 14 May 2007 Broadband receiver & tri-axial search coils • Loss Cone Imager (Boston University, AFRL) – High Sensitivity Telescope (HST): measures 100 – 500 keV e- with 0.1 cm2-str geometric factor within 6.5 deg of loss cone – Fixed Sensor Heads (FSH): 130 deg x 10 deg of pitch angle distribution for 50 – 700 keV electrons every 167 msec Loss Cone Imager HST & FSH • Vector Magnetometer (UCLA) – 0 – 8 Hz three-axis measurement at ±0.1 nT accuracy WPIx instruments designed to measure efficiency of VLF injection, propagation and wave-particle interactions in a controlled manner Vector magnetometer 10 DSX Space Weather Payload Plasmasphere Radiation belts Ring current & aurora Protons HIPS HEPS LIPS HEPS LEESA CEASE CEASE Electrons HIPS LCI-FSH LIPS HIPS HEPS LEESA 0.0001 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 1000 CEASE Energy (MeV) Energy (MeV)Sensor (Amptek, AFRL) CEASE - Compact Environment Anomaly LEESA - Low Energy Electrostatic Analyzer (AFRL) LIPS - Low Energy Imaging Particle Spectrometer (PSI) HIPS - High Energy Imaging Particle Spectrometer (PSI) HEPS - High Energy Particle Sensor (Amptek, ATC) Comprehensive SWx sensor suite will map full range of MEO space particle hazards LIPS LEESA 11 DSX Space Weather Effects Payload Photometers CREDANCE SET Carrier (NASA-GSFC) 1” NASA Space Environment Testbed (SET) • CREDANCE (QinetiQ) – Cosmic Radiation Environment Dosimetry and Charging Experiment • DIME (Clemson Univ) – Dosimetry Intercomparison and Miniaturization • ELDRS (Arizona State) – Development of space-based test platform for the characterization of proton effects and Enhanced Low Dose Rate Sensitivity (ELDRS) in bipolar junction transistors • COTS-2 (CNES and NASA) – Validation of single event effects mitigation via fault tolerant methodology Radiometers AFRL/PRS “COTS” sensors Objective: directly measure changes in • Optical transmission, • Thermal absorption • Thermal emission due to MEO radiation environment SFx experiments will quantify MEO environment effects on advanced spacecraft technologies & determine basic physics of breakdown DSX Orbital Coverage 6000 x 12000 km, 120 deg inclination Equatorial pitch-angles vs. L* DSX Plasma Environment Plasma density vs. radius Characteristic frequencies vs. radius DSX Energetic Particle Environment > 36 MeV protons vs. radius > 2 MeV electrons vs. radius DSX Lightning Climatology Satellite-Derived (LIS/OTD) Monthly Global Lightning Climatology (1995 – 2003) Flashes Km-2 Year January August • Monthly global lightning climatology at 0.5 deg resolution has been developed from LIS/OTD satellite data for DSX mission planning – Model captures both cloud-to-cloud and cloud-to-ground strokes • Applications to map DSX field line footprints onto Earth’s surface being developed – “Lightning index” will computed for each ephemeris point used in mission planning DSX CONOPS Overview • Three-axis stabilized satellite with ~ 5 hour orbit • SWx and SFx payloads operate continuously • Momentum and power restrictions limit WPIx operations – Field line tracking 1-2 hours/orbit – TNT VLF high power transmission, 0.5 – 1 hour/orbit at 5 kV – TNT is in passive or relaxation sounding when not in high-power VLF transmission – BBR survey, LEESA, VMAG and LCI FSH are on continuously – LCI HST only on in field like tracking mode – LEESA high data rate mode for VLF transmission – End-of-life “Hail Mary” mode for TNT VLF transmissions at 10 kV • Detailed CONOPS planning underway – MOC-POC-Science Data Center structure – Collaboration opportunities with other assets being identified DSX Collaboration Opportunities – Space 1 • Cassiope/Enhanced Polar Outflow Probe (E-PoP), CSA, CRC (James), NRL (Siefring, Bernhardt) – 300 x 1500 km, polar inclination, launch Sep 2009 – Radio Receiver Instrument (RRI), ELF-VLF 10 Hz -30 kHz, two-axis E-field – Fast Auroal Imager (FFI), ~ 1 MeV electrons • Radiation Belt Storm Probes (RBSP), NASA – 2 satellites in GTO, < 18 deg incl, launch no earlier than fall 2011 – Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science Suite (EMFISIS, Univ. of Iowa, Kletzing), 3 axis B-field, 2 axis E-field 10 Hz – 12 kHz (1 channel E-field 10 kHz – 400 kHz) – Magnetic Electron-Ion Spectrometer (MagEIS, BU & Aerospace, Spence & Blake), 40 keV – 10 MeV electrons – Relativistic Electron-Proton Telescope (REPT, BU & Univ. of Colorado, Spence & Baker), 2 MeV – 10 MeV electrons – RBSP Ion Composition Explorer (RBSPICE, NJIT, Lanzerotti), 25 keV – 500 keV electrons DSX Collaboration Opportunities –Space 2 • DEMETER, CNES, Stanford Co-PI (Inan) – 670 km, 98.3 deg incl, ongoing mission, will it last to 2012? – IMSC, 3 component B-field, ~ 2 Hz – 20 kHz – IDP, electron detector, ~ 50 keV – 500 keV • TRIANA, CNES, Stanford Co-PI (Inan), follow on to DEMETER – 700 km, polar, launch 2011 – IMM-MF, B-field 3 component, ~2 Hz – 20 kHz, 1 component 10 kHz – 1MHz – IDEE, electron detectors, 70 keV – 4 MeV • ORBITALS, CSA, Univ. of Calgary (Mann), Univ. of Colorado (Baker) – SCM, B-field up to 20 kHz – EPS, electrons 25 keV – 12 MeV DSX Collaboration Opportunities – Ground • High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP, AFRL) – Electrojet-modulated VLF antenna at L ~ 4.8 with extensive frequency & mode control • Navy VLF transmitters, RBR TIPER program (AFRL, DARPA & Stanford) – NAA at Cutler, ME, L ~ 3.0, 24 kHz, 885 kW, began keying in Jun 2008 – NWC at Churchill, Australia, L ~ 1.3, 21 kHz, 1 MW, begin keying ? DSX Status & Summary • • • • • • System CDR completed (May 2008) #1 in 2008 DoD SERB (Nov 2008) Payloads currently being delivered to AFRL/RV at Kirtland AFB AI&T to be completed by Apr 2010 DSX Science Team Meeting, 15-18 Sep 2009, Lake Arrowhead Negotiations underway with STP for manifest as secondary payload on DMSP F-19 with launch in Oct 2012 DSX New Technologies to be Space Qualified • • • • BBR: µLNA and µADC VLF receiver chips LCI: RENA particle counting chip TATU: Adaptive tuning for optimizing VLF TX Y-Antenna: graphite epoxy material, largest compaction ratio (1:100) and best mass efficiency (35 g/m) flown to date • ESPA ring integral to host s/c bus structure • Soft-Ride Vibration Isolation – integral to s/c, not in launch stack DSX Schedule of Milestones Bus Deliveries PL Deliveries Critical Path LCI Y-Antenna HIPS WIPER LIPS CEASE LEESA ESPA Payload Module Separation System 06/02/10 SA JUL’09 AM Flt Battery ECS Z-Antenna PM VMAG HEPS Rad/Photom Avionics Module SET-1 AUG‘08 Hardware Delivery Window TACSAT-3 DSX AI&T (AFRL) Last update 1/22/09 DSX The Team Program Office Systems Engineering Integration and Test Launch Segment Spacecraft Bus VLF Wave-Particle Interaction Experiment Space Environmental Effects PROPULSION DIRECTORATE Space Weather Experiments