Title: SNAP Systems Engineering WBS 1.3
1SNAP Systems EngineeringWBS 1.3
- David Pankow
- Space Sciences Laboratory,
- and Mechanical Engineering Department,
- University of California Berkeley
- November 2003
2SNAP Engineering Overview
- Observatory Overview
- Optical Telescope Assembly (OTA)
- Telescope (TMA-63) Packaging
- Instrument (Camera) Packaging
- Outer Stray Light Baffle
- Active Mechanism Concerns
- Spacecraft Overview
- Sub-systems Summary
- Market Survey (e.g. RSDO Catalog)
- Mission Profile - Launch Vehicle and Orbit
Selection - Ground Segment
- Systems Engineering
- Design and Trade Studies Status
- Documentation Configuration Control
- R D Tasks, Manpower, Schedule
- Summary
3SNAPs DESIGN EVOLUTION
- Passive Cold Biased Bus Baffle / Warm Optics
- Active Coolers are not Mature, Cryogen's are
Short Lived - High Earth Orbit allows Passive Cooling and
Stable Pointing - Build, Test, and Fly Warm Optics
- Cold Optics are a Significant Cost Schedule
Driver (NGST) - Compact Telescope with the Longest Light Baffle
that can be Fit ! - Generic and Rigid Spacecraft
- One Mission Thermal Attitude ...near Sun Line
Normal Viewing - No Flexible Appendages and Minimal Mechanisms
- On Board Momentum Control Management
- Structural Noise Isolation at the Sources
- RSDO generic spacecraft with Identified Upgrades
4OBSERVATORY Cross Section
Secondary Mirror, Hexapod and Lampshade Light
Baffle
Primary Mirror
Spectrograph
Instrument Dewar
Focal Plane
Instrument Thermal Radiator
Spacecraft
Door Assembly
Fold-Flat Mirror
Primary Solar Array
Main Baffle Assembly
Tertiary Mirror
Optical Bench
Secondary Metering Structure
Stovepipe Baffle
5TELESCOPE OPTICS DESIGN (TMA-63)
- Annular Field Three Mirror Anastigmat (TMA)
- Folded Light Path Permits Very Compact Telescope
Design - 2 meter Primary in 3.3m long package with 20.66m
Focal Length - Allows anti-sunward Thermal Radiator for
Instrument - Obstructing Secondary causes Annular Field of
View - Single (Flat) Focal Plane Array of Detectors
- (Often called the Fully Integrated Detector
Option (FIDO) - 36 - CCDs
- 36 - IR Sensors
- Spectrograph (fully redundant)
- Common 140K remains Adequate
- 130K Spectrograph bias is viable
6TELESCOPE MIRROR OPTIONS
- Corning ULE Ultra-Low Expansion Glass
- Face Sheets Bonded to Water-Jetted Honeycomb Core
- 180 mm thick Core with 2.5mm Ribs Typical
- Achieves 85-90 Light weighting
- Extensive Manufacturing History
- Schott Zerodur Glass/Ceramic Material
- Solid Blank, Mass Reduced by Machining Backside
- 190 mm Pockets with 5mm Ribs Typical
- Open Back is Lowest Fabrication Risk
- Semi-Closed Back for Greater Rigidity
- Achieves 70-85 Light weighting
- Extensive Manufacturing History
- All Approaches are Viable for SNAP
7TELESCOPE STRUCTURE
COMPOSITE TELESCOPE STRUCTURE(driven by the
required 1 ppm Optics Stability)- Standard
M-55J Graphite Fibers are Adequate for
the Needed ppm / K Stability- Quasi-Isotropic
Lay Up CTE lt -0.12 ppm /? C- On Orbit
Temperature Control DT lt 2 ? C- Cyanate
Ester Matrix provides low CME
(moisture)- These are Todays Technology !
SECONDARY MIRROR SUPPORT STRUCTURE
PRIMARY OPTICAL BENCH
OPTICS COFFIN BELOW
OPTICS, THERMAL, AND GEOMETRIC DEFINITIONS ARE
COMPLETEDETAILED DESIGN AND FEM ANALYSES ARE
MATURE
with Three STIFF Metering Beams
8TELESCOPE OVERVIEW
- TMA-63 TELESCOPE DESIGN IS PROGRESSING RAPIDLY
- OPTICAL TELESCOPE (OTA) - Implementation (TMA-63
is very mature !) - Open Back Zerodur vs Closed Back ULE (LBL -
Sagem-Reosc) studies complete - No Zerodur show-stoppers Increased glass
mass, perhaps shorter schedule - Critical end to end Hubble (Reflex) Test
definition results are promising - FEM results suggest Std. 1/20th wave optics 1G
validation appears viable - 64 Support Fingers needed to Reduce Gravity Sag
in Primary Mirror
9INSTRUMENT and THERMAL
PASSIVE GIGA-CAM 140K DEWAR THERMAL BUDGET 45
w Radiating Capacity from 2m2 unobstructed 130K
Radiator to Space lt 4wgt Radiator Thermal
Isolation Mounts MLI behind RADIANT COUPLING
LOSSES lt 6wgt CONICAL Cosmic Ray Shield - MLI
outside (e 1) lt17wgt Open End CONE Blackbody
Loss to warm Coffin Cavity CONDUCTIVE COUPLING
LOSSES lt 1wgt Giga-Cam Thermal Isolation Mounts lt
2wgt Dewar Thermal Isolation Mounts and Cold Plate
Gaskets lt 1wgt Electrical Flex-Print (TBD
traces) lt 8wgt Average Electrical Power for
HgCdTe CCDs 6w CURRENT MARGIN 10C
Gradient allocated for Cold Plate, Radiator, and
Flex-Links
NOTE Thermal and Contamination Close Outs NOT
SHOWN for Clarity
130K PASSIVE RADIATOR
FOCAL PLANE
Spectrograph
SHUTTERS
DEWAR
10INSTRUMENT THERMAL NOTES
RECENT SSL MISSION EXPERIENCE
HESSI DETECTORS Extensive Thermal Isolation Only
3W of Active Cooling
HESSI COLD PLATE ASSEMBLY Supports Germanium
Detector Assembly under Vacuum
11STRAY LIGHT BAFFLE DESIGN
- FUNDAMENTAL BAFFLE DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS
- Top Cut Angle Chosen to Block Sunlight in All
Science Attitudes - Earth-Lit Region must be Well Baffled
- BaffleLamp ShadeStove Pipe diffraction line
dictates the Hat Size - Trades Indicate an Ordinary Aluminum Shell
Construction is Adequate ! - Detailed ASAP (software) Stray Light analysis are
now underway !
12TELESCOPE THERMAL
- OPTICS Build,Test, Fly Warm
- High Earth orbit (HEO) to minimize Earth-glow
Loading - GaAs - OSR Striping of the (warm) Solar Array
Panels - Front surface heat rejection Only
- Optical Solar Reflectors are back silvered
Quartz tiles (a 8, e 80) - Low emissivity Silvered Mirrors
- Thermal Isolation mounting and Extensive MLI
blanketing - Cool Light Baffle and
- Actively Heated Telescope
13SNAP OBSERVATORY STRUCTURES
- PRIMARY STRUCTURES
- Total, or Integrated Observatory Design Finite
Element Model (FEM) is done - Baffle, Door, Telescope, Optics Design Studies
Posted - Stout Bus defined - 17 Hz -1st Mode exceeds 10 Hz Delta IV reqmt,
with 20 Launch Mass Margin
GFRP Composite Telescope Structure
Telescope Light Baffle Structure
17 Hz First Mode
Coffee Table Spacecraft Bus
14ACTIVE MECHANISM CONCERNS
Our Guess at Reviewers Likely First Reactions !
15SNAPs ELECTRICAL DIAGRAM OVERVIEW
INSTRUMENT FUNCTIONS
HIGH SPEED DATA PORTS
MIL-STD 1553 BUS Interfaces
SPACECRAFT FUNCTIONS
16SNAP SPACECRAFT OVERVIEW
- MOSTLY GENERIC SUBSYSYEMS
- EPS (electrical), CDH (command data handling),
TCS (bus thermal) - MISSION UNIQUE SUBSYSTEMS
- ACS (attitude control), SMS (structure
mechanisms), RF (Communications) - THE CLEAN INTERFACE EXCEPTIONS
- Telescope mounts to the Spacecraft Coffee
Table, or ANY FLAT SURFACE - Load Path expands from (66) PAF to 2.5m Baffle
Telescope Bipod Ring - Stiffness Strength Requirements must be imposed
on Primary Structure - Star Trackers, Gyro (IRU), and Solar Arrays mount
on the Instrument - Observatory Control Unit Memory mount on the
Spacecraft - IMDCs (GSFC) Risk Assessment New Technologies
Comments - Risk on spacecraft bus is generally low, with
well-understood technologies and readily
available components - No significant technology development required
for bus
17SNAP Mission Profile
- Delta IV M (4240) Launch from KSC
- 2.6 x 25 Re Injection to Final 28? Inclination
Orbit - Phased for near Ecliptic Plane Orbit
- Our Plus The perigee is Stable Over Berkeley !
- Commissioning Phase - several overlapping weeks
- Spacecraft Turn On Activities
- Structured Cool Down of the Telescope
- Slow Roll, or Auxiliary (rear) Solar Arrays
- Degassing Dry Out Period
- Optics Turn On Open Cover, Focus, Cal., etc.
- Mission / Science Operations (Routine Survey)
- Alternate near N/S Ecliptic Pole Observing
- Observing is Suspended below 9 Re (radiation
issues) - Onboard Storage and High Speed Data Down-Link
Delta IV fairing
18SNAP GROUND DATA SYSTEM
19SNAP GROUND DATA SYSTEM
- SSLs Berkeley Ground Station (BGS) - 11m S-Band
Dish - 3rd Year of mostly Automated Operation
- MOC SOC Infrastructure for FAST / RHESSI /
CHIPS - BGS dish is SX-Band Capable (but not Ka-Band)
NRAOs ALMA project - 12m Ka Band VERTEX RSI
dish (Jan 03 1st Light)
20SNAP S.E. Resources Allocation
MASS ALLOCATION (21 margin) 2020 kg Direct to
Orbit Launch Capacity
MISSION REQUIREMENTS Complete Document is Posted
at snap.lbl.gov
21SNAP S.E. Resources Allocation
- ELECTRICAL POWER REQUIREMENTS
MISSION REQUIREMENTS Complete Document is Posted
at snap.lbl.gov
22SYSTEMS ENGINEERING DOCUMENTS
- TOP LEVEL SNAP PLANNING DOCUMENTS
- Mission Definition and Requirements Document
(MDRD) Describes our Negotiated Level 1 Science
Requirements version 1d is posted. - Integrated Requirements Databaseis the evolving
Flow Down of Requirements to the Level 2, 3 4
Requirements and is posted. - Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) is in Place and
Being Used for all SNAP Planning and Budgeting
Efforts. - Draft Observatory IT Plan is under Active Review
and Discussion - Solid Works and PDM is Networked, and the
Maturing SNAP Solid Model is under Configuration
Control (15th release now posted). - IGES export issues to structural and thermal
models are being examined - Instrument, Telescope Spacecraft ICDs will be
developed as designs mature
23SYSTEMS ENGINEERING DOCUMENTS
- SNAPs EVOLVING CONTROLLED DOCUMENTS DATABASE
24SYSTEMS ENGINEERING STUDIES
- STRUCTURES 1st Generation NASTRAN Model
Complete - Baffle Trades, Telescope Trades, Optical Element
Trades, Bus defined - End to end 1G Optics verification plan is
progressing - THERMAL DESIGN
- Excel Matlab Lumped Node Telescope Camera
Models allow cross checks - TELESCOPE OPTICS
- Optics Tolerancing Submitted, and detailed Stray
Light Studies are underway - Draft Telescope Primary Mirror Specification
Documents under Review - ATTITUDE CONTROL SYSTEM
- Image Jitter based Modeling and Simulation
Studies are Show Promise - Parallel Physical and State Models allow
interactive cross checking - COMMAND DATA HANDLING
- Industry std. fully redundant cross strapped
1553 avionics bus defined - High speed selectively redundant Instrument
data bus architecture defined
25SYSTEMS ENGINEERING REVIEWS
- SNAP MISSION LEVEL REVIEWS
- 01 IMDC ISAL Mission and Instrument Design
Reviews at GSFC - Extremely useful for Refining the Mission
Concepts - 02 Independent Lehman RD Review
- SNAP team received many complements for a
thorough presentation - 02 Team X Mission Design Review at JPL
- Mission Implementation refined, No New Mission
concerns raised - NASAs BEYOND EINSTEIN Announcement of
Opportunity - Type 1 Type 2 proposal outcomes are not yet
fully known - ISSUES CONCERNS
- Critical Path (Optics) Procurement Options are
being pursued
26SYSTEMS ENGINEERING STATUS
- TELESCOPE packaging options and requirements are
well defined - Several Light-weighting Options are Actively
being Considered - Our teams desire is to maintain technology and
vendor flexibility - OPTICS PROCUREMENT IS OUR CRITICAL PATH ITEM
- INSTRUMENT needs and viable approaches are known
actively pursued - Sensor Packaging Electrical Packaging Trades
are In Progress - Thermal management calls for continuing
vigilance -
- SPACECRAFT can be a generic ( interagency) RSDO
procurement - Instrument - ACS interactions calls for studies
tracking - LAUNCH VEHICLE Track the Options and New
Development Maturity
27Systems RD Schedule
28SUMMARY COMMENTS
- Build, Test, Fly Warm is both Proven and Cost
Effective - Passive Thermal Approach Remains Viable for the
Instrument - SNAP has Several Lightweight, Low CTE Mirror
Options - Composite Telescope Structures Are Well
Understood, and this Technology Continues to
Mature - Spacecraft Bus has several concerns, but No New
Technology - Healthy Competition in the Heavy Lifter Launch
Business - Delta IV (3 for 3) EUTELSAT, DSCS-A3, DSCS-B6
- Atlas V (3 for 3) Hotbird 6, Hellas-Sat,
Rainbow 1 (or Atlas IIIB) - Sea-Launch (9 for 10) but International
Partnership is a concern