Title: Wes Ousley
1Micro-Arcsecond Imaging Mission, Pathfinder
(MAXIM-PF)
Thermal
Wes Ousley Dan Nguyen May 13-17, 2002
2Summary
- Concept meets scientific instrument requirements
- Maintain mirror modules at 20/- 0.1oC, mirror
structures at 20/- 1oC - Accommodate detector CCDs at 100oC
- Accommodate cryo-coolers to cool Super Star
Tracker to 7oK - Maintain other instrument support equipments
between 10oC and 40oC - Spacecraft Bus requirements met
- Maintain Optic Hub, Free-Flyer and Detector
spacecraft within operational temperatures over
Phase 1 and Phase 2 observations - Thermal system resource requirements
- TCS mass is about 50 MLI blankets and 40 heat
pipe systems - Hub 15kg, 80W heaters (Phase 1 total), 650K
hardware, 1M manpower - Detector craft 27kg, 10W, 1.1M hardware, 2.5M
manpower - Average FF 13kg, 10W, 500K hardware, 400K
manpower
3Design Features
- Optics Spacecraft
- Maintain mirror module temperatures with MLI and
heaters - Mini sun shield for each mirror module minimizes
impact of sun angle - Radiator on a no-sun side of each spacecraft
- Phase 1 Optics Hub
- All FF radiators blocked, except the one directly
anti-sun - Louver on the exposed radiator minimizes heater
power - Bottom-facing radiator not sufficient to keep Hub
spacecraft cool - Heat pipe coupling transports some heat from Hub
to exposed radiator via releasable junction - Detector Spacecraft
- Sunshield required to keep instruments cool
- Extreme thermal isolation required for SST and
CCD detector system - CCD temperature controlled with radiator and
heaters - Cryocooler radiator on spacecraft
- Locate all radiators on the anti-sun sides
- Heat pipes transport heat from spacecraft
components to radiator
4Optics Spacecraft
Sun
Hub radiator used when separated
Radiator with Louver
MLI on other exposed sides
Heat pipe coupler used when together
5Detector Craft
Sunshield
MLI blankets
Spacecraft radiators
6Trades and Studies
- Thermally couple hub and free flyers in Phase 1
- Reduces heater power (now 80W)
- Mass and hardware costs would increase very
difficult to test - Distribute radiators on free flyer sides, so heat
pipes not needed - Reduces system mass and cost by about 18kg, 1M
- Phase 1 heater power increases by over 300W
- Large sunshield for each free flyer and hub
- Slightly increases thermal stability
- Increases mass and complexity
- Distribute radiators on detector craft, so fewer
heat pipes needed - Reduces system mass and cost by about 12kg, 500K
- Component location becomes critical, and heater
power increases - Critical thermal system parameters
- Thermal isolation of mirrors, SST/cryocooler
system, cold CCD and radiator - Heat pipe systems design and testability
7Backup Slides
8Instrument Accommodations
- Mirror Modules
- Radiate heat to space passively through MLI.
- Require 1.5W of heater power to maintain each
module at 20o/-0.1C - Utilize sunshields to minimize temperature
fluctuations - Thermally isolate mirror modules from spacecraft
deck - CCD Camera
- Cool detectors to 100oC using dedicated radiator
on the anti-sun side - Detector electronic heat dissipation combine with
spacecraft dissipation - Super Star Tracker
- Utilize ACTDP cryo-cooler to maintain tracker at
7oK - Radiate cryo-cooler rejected heat at the
spacecraft radiator sized to maintain at 10oC
9Mission Sequence
Launch
Transfer Stage
10Component LayoutHub Core Petal
Hub Core
Hub Petal (6)
Detector S/C Payload Adapter Fitting
Optical Module (9)
Optical Module (11)
Comm Antenna (S/C to S/C 0.3 m)
LOS Laser
11Component LayoutDetector
Solar Array (4.5 m2)
Comm Antenna (Ground/SpaceCraft 0.5 m)
Comm Antenna (S/C to S/C 0.3 m)
Comm Antenna (Ground/SpaceCraft 0.5 m)
LOS laser receiver
CCD Electronics
CCD Camera