Title: Planetary Science Summer School 2002
1Planetary Science Summer School 2002
- Mars Atmospheric Boundary Layer Explorer
- (Mars ABLE)
- Scout Proposal Summary
- Study funded by NASA HQ Code S
2Executive Summary
- Science Goal Boundary layer atmospherics
- Secondary goal Geomorphology
- Science Mission Length 2 weeks (extendable)
- System Tethered, zero pressure Balloon with
entry system - Class IVa
- Launch Vehicle Delta 2425
- Total Mass 506 kg
- Total cost 347 M
3Mars ABLE
- Mars ABLE cruise stage and deployed configuration
4Agenda
- Science Objectives
- Instrumentation
- Atmosphere
- Imaging and Geomorphology
- Spacecraft Configuration
- Subsystem Description
- Program Management
- Mass, schedule, budget, risk
5Primary Scientific Objectives
- Atmospheric polar boundary layer
- First direct wind, temperature, pressure and
water vapor profile measurements (0 m -500 m)
to characterize the diurnal cycle of the Mars
polar boundary layer in early summer - Two week proof of concept for multiple tethered
balloon mission investigations of boundary layer
variability and surface-atmosphere interactions - Bridge the gap between surface and orbiter
measurements
6Secondary Scientific Objectives
- Imaging and geomorphology
- First aerial photographs that provide a link
between surface and orbital imagery - Ultra-high resolution imaging of polar
geomorphology - Surface environment
- First characterization of the oxidizing potential
of the polar surface environment with miniature
sensor technology - Atmospheric oxidants
- H2O2, O3, H2O, etc.
- First measurements of static and low frequency
electric fields near the surface of Mars
7Landing Site
- 80 5 North Polar Layered Terrain
- Final site selection to be determined six months
prior to launch - Community landing site workshops
MOC E03-00889 courtesy of MSSS
8Science
- MEPAG Goal Current climate
- Local cap edge diurnal circulation interaction
between local thermal/katabatic flows and general
circulation thought responsible for dust storm
seeding (Kahn, 1992) - Volatile defrosting regime (MOC imagery)
- MEPAG Goal Follow the water
- Complement MRO 2005 PMIRR H2O global coverage
with near surface (z, t) distribution in key H2O
source region
9Current Climate
- Orbiter measurements uncertain in near surface lt2
km region - Surface lander measurements at 2 m
- Region 2 m - 500 m governs air-surface
interactions
10Volatile Defrosting Regime
- Curious MOC images suggest local thermal
circulations and wind influence defrosting
patterns - Dark defrosting(?) features
- Arrow structure
MGS MOC Images courtesy of MSSS
11Science
- MEPAG Goal Dust, surface interactions and human
exploration - Surface friction velocity (U), key unknown in
Mars GCMS (Hollingworth, 2001) - Related to dust lifting capability empirically
- U 2-3ms-1 for sand grains 200-500um (Polkko et
al, 2000) - 5ms-1 for dust 1um
- Oxidation and ELF measurements to characterize
surface environment for human exploration - MEPAG Goal Past climate
- Geomorphology of polar layered deposits and
seasonal frost cover
12Meteorology Measurements
- Tethered balloon
- Two week mission to characterize polar spring
diurnal cycle - Anchoring for boundary layer temperature,
pressure, and wind profile measurements - Vertical spatial sampling at (0,) 2, 10, 100,
200, 500 m - Temporal sampling at 1 Hz (turbulence fluxes)
- Integrated instrument package with Pathfinder
ASI/MET heritage - Additional new wind and water vapor sensors,
transmitter, battery - Data analysis
- Height registration from modeling of tether
catenary using P, U, T 500m data and imager data
13Meteorology Instrument Package
- Measurements
- Pressure
- TAVIS magnetic reluctance diaphragm sensor
- (VIKING, PATHFINDER,-0.01mbar)
- Temperature
- Thin-wire thermocouple (PATHFINDER, -0.1K)
- Horizontal wind speeds
- Hot film anemometer (BEAGLE II, 0-60ms-1,
-0.5ms-1) - Water vapor
- Miniature laser diode spectrometer (JPL
development, TRL 6) - Utilizes Heritage Technology
14Mars Atmospheric Oxidant Sensor
- Will quantify and characterize the possible
species of oxidants in the Martian atmosphere - Can reveal the role oxidants have played in the
evolution of Martian chemistry - Important in development of missions for the
future human habitation of Mars
PI Aaron Zent, NASA Ames
15Extremely Low Frequency (ELF) Sensor
- Measures Mars fair weather field (due to
radioisotopes, cosmic rays, etc.) - Measures the induced electric field due to dust
devil activity - Horizontal plate antenna placed low on the tether
and near the surface
16Static Field Sensors
- A cold, dry Martian climate is conducive to
electrostatic charging of the airborne dust
(triboelectric effect) - Uses MECA technology to measure the residual
Electric Field on Mars
17Narrow Angle Imager
- Requirements
- Daylight imaging
- Panchromatic visible (400 1000 nm)
- 2 cm GSD (ground sample distance) from 500 m
- 3 cm resolution from 500 m
- 40 m x 40 m image size
- 168 images (mission total)
- Specifications
- 2048 x 2048 pixels 9 ?m x 9 ?m
- 10-bit digitization
- 225 mm focal length lens
- 1 ms exposure, frame transfer
18Context Images
- MRO CTX 30 km swath _at_ 6 m resolution to locate
actual landing site - MRO HiRISE 1230 x1230 m _at_ 30 cm resolution
context image - Descent images?
19Context Images
MRO CTX image to locate actual landing - 30 km
swath
MRO HiRISE context image 1.2 x 1.2 km
Landing ellipse - 10 x 100 km
20Imager Operations
- No navigation ? random image locations
- Image selection options
- Preview and select
- On-board prioritization
21Preview and Select
- Each sol downlink 40 preview images compressed
40x and 12 selected images (from previous sol)
compressed 8X
22On-board Prioritization
- Acquire gt 14 images/sol
- On-board computer catalogs locations of previous
images referenced to context image - Priority function
- Seek overlap for temporal coverage at selected
location - Avoid overlap for maximum spatial coverage
- Downlink top 14 images each sol
23Spatial Coverage
MRO HiRISE context image 1230 x 1230 m
168 images 269,000 m2 (137 coverage)
MER Pancam 2 cm pixels to 70 m radius 15,400 m2
250 m radius from anchor 196,000 m2
40 m x 40 m image 133 x 133 HiRISE pixels
1600 m2
24Requirements Flowdown
- 2048 x 2048 x 10-bits, compressed 8X ? 5.25
Mb/image - 168 images 560 previews ? 100 Mb/day for 14
days - lt 1 cm motion blur ?
- lt 10 m/s lateral motion
- lt 1/s pitch/roll, 25/s yaw
25Instrumentation Summary
Mass includes 30 contingency
26Instrument Mass/Power Budget
- Magnetometer 30 g (1 ea), 150 mW
- ELF - 100 g (1 ea), 300 mW
- Static field sensor 20 g (5 ea), 100 mW
- MET pkg 100 g (5 ea), 800 mW
- MAOS 55 g, 250 mW
- Point spec, 300 g (1 ea), 100 mW
27Mars ABLE Spacecraft
- Carrier System
- Spacecraft bus
- Propulsion system
- Entry System
- Inflation system
- Heat shield
- Free-float system
- Balloon
- Gondola
- Instruments and Tether
MARS ABLE
500m
28Carrier and Entry Vehicles
- Carrier
- Star scanner and sun sensors
- Passive thermal protection
- MLI
- 4 solar arrays on deployed booms with locking
latch mechanism - Entry Vehicle
- Inflation system
- 4 helium tanks
- Heat shield
- Tanks used as anchors after balloon inflation
29Free-float system
- Balloon 20 m diameter, 0.5 mil thick,
non-aluminized Mylar / polyethylene - Tether 1 mm diameter, polyethylene
- Aluminum gondola
- solar array on deployed booms with locking latch
mechanism
30Carrier Power
Solar Array 4 x 1m2 , TJ, GaAs Primary
Battery 2 x 8 cell Li-SOCL2 16
AHr Electronics 11 x 6U Smart Solid
State Boards, COTS conversion
tech.
31Entry Power
Thermal Battery 2 x 2AHr Electronics 6 x 6U
Smart Solid State Boards,
COTS conversion tech.
32Balloon Gondola Power
Solar Array 1 x 0.26m2 , TJ,
GaAs Primary Battery 1 x 8 cell Li-Ion 5
Ahr Electronics 5 x 6U Smart Solid
State Boards, COTS
conversion tech.
33Attitude and Control Cruise Stage
- Requirements
- Pointing control of geometric spin axis within 2
degrees (7200 arcsec), 3 sigma - Pointing knowledge of the geometric spin axis
within 1 degree (3600 arcsec), 3 sigma - Implementation
- Active spin-stabilized carrier
- Mechanically redundant thrusters
- Orient spin axis
- Control nutation
- Control spin rate
- Star scanner, sun sensor, IMU
- Determine stellar inertial attitude
- Estimate angular axis
34Balloon Attitude and Control
- Knowledge of balloon azimuth angle to within a
few degrees (3 sigma) - Set of 10 coarse sun sensors (on gondola)
35Attitude and Control Entry System
- Support release of parachute at required dynamic
pressure - Accelerometers for deceleration profile
- Internally redundant power conditioning
electronics
36Uplink Communications
- Communications facilitated via the DSN through
orbiting assets - 100 Mb per day
- 14 pictures per day _at_ 5.25 Mb per picture
- 27 Mb per day total for all other instruments
- 3 uplinks per day for 5 minutes each
- 1 photo sequencing command for downlink
37Command and Data Handling
- R6000 processor
- 8051 controller
- 64 MB proc RAM for CDS/database
- 64 MB proc RAM for data storage
- Heritage system components
- 2 flight units
38Mass Estimate
39Program Schedule
40Cost Estimate
41Risk Management
- Most systems low risk due to flight heritage
- Balloon deployment and inflation development
planned - Some risk associated with instrumented tether
- Possible shock to tether and/or gondola due to
impact - Analysis to be completed
- TRL 7 or above
42Alternate Designs Considered
- Multiple balloons for multiple locations
- Drifting balloons for imaging and spectrometry
mission - Montgolfiere balloon
- Mobile lander with pop-up balloon
- System anchored followed by break- away tether
43Acknowledgements
- PSSS Anita Sohus, Coco Karipinski, Jason
Adringa, Jean Clough, Kay Ferrari, Susan
Braunheim - Outside Consultants Jay Wu, Viktor Kerzhanovich
- Team I Bob Wilson , et. al
- Team X Bob Oberto, et. al.
- Thanks to all other JPL personnel who provided
resources, time and inspiration