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Space Engineering:

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Space Engineering: A World Of Difference 10. Ir. A. Kamp. Mechanical Engineering. In-depth analysis. Stress. Dynamic and Acoustic. Thermal distortion ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Space Engineering:


1
Space Engineering A World of DifferenceIr. A.
Kamp a.kamp_at_lr.tudelft.nlhttp//as.lr.tudelft.nl
Delft University of TechnologyAstrodynamics
Satellite Systems
2
Space Remoteness from Earth
  • Our familiarity with
  • Protective Earth atmosphere
  • 1-G environment
  • Accessibility for repair/inspection
  • Is partly lost in Space Engineering

3
What Makes It So Different?
  • Space different and strange environment
  • Demanding performance requirements
  • Complex systems
  • Multidisciplinary
  • Severe safety
  • High availability
  • Many interfacing parties

4
Top ClassComplexity, Safety, Availability,
Interfaces
5
Complex and High Cost Systems
  • Cost per kg
  • INTELSAT development launch 250,000
    /kg in-orbit mass
  • ISS 450,000 /kg
  • Globalstar 50,000 /kg
  • Mid-sized car 25 /kg
  • Number of personnel involved in development
  • gt100-200
  • Time required from initial conception till
    operation
  • 3-10 years

Ref AE1-801 SET I
6
Objective of Presentation
  • How strange is the Space Environment?
  • Some of the impact on engineering
  • How are space systems developed?to minimise
  • development risk and risk of failure

7
What Is Space?
  • It is difficult to get to and to stay in
  • A completely unforgiving environment
  • If you screw up the engineering, SOMEBODY
    DIES!
  • A very hostile environment
  • Its different!

8
Space Difficult To Get In
  • Severe launch loads

Antenna
Acoustic loads
box
Random loads
LVA
Steady State SinusShock loads
9
Dimensioning Instruments, Electronic Boxes, Etc
Size your equipment to withstand the static load
factors and the severe random vibrations
60
5
10
Mechanical Engineering
  • In-depth analysis
  • Stress
  • Dynamic and Acoustic
  • Thermal distortion
  • Fatigue
  • Micro-vibration
  • Mass budgeting
  • Structural testing(random vibrations, acoustic,
    shocks)

11
Space Environment
  • Kind
  • No water vapour
  • No wind
  • Very clean environment
  • Zero effective gravity
  • Hostile
  • Hot and cold
  • Very high vacuum
  • Atomic oxygen
  • High energy electromagnetic radiation
  • Particle radiation
  • Debris

12
Hot and Cold
  • Solar flux densityon earth 500 W/m2 in space
    1400 W/m2
  • Earth surface 293 K cold space 4 K
  • No convection

13
Hot and Cold
  • Without special measures material temperatures in
    earth orbitmay vary between 270 and 130 C

14
Good Performance Only If
  • Narrow temperature ranges
  • Electronics typically 10/ 40 C
  • Batteries - 5/ 15
  • Hydrazine fuel 9/ 40
  • Limited thermal gradients
  • Adequate thermal stability

15
ENVISAT Thermal Protection
  • Thermal blankets
  • Superior insulation
  • Radiators
  • Rejection of heat

16
ENVISAT Thermal Protection
  • S/C bottom
  • battery compartment inside view

17
ENVISAT Thermal Protection
  • S/C bottom
  • battery compartment radiator surfaces

18
Thermal Engineering
  • Design analysis
  • Thermal testing in vacuum/solar sim.
  • Verify the predicted temperature extremes
  • Verify proper functioning of equipment under TV
    conditions
  • After thermal cycling
  • At Textreme

19
High Vacuum
  • Immediately life threatening
  • Engines have to carry fuel and oxidizer
  • Risk of cold welding
  • Risk of inadvertent pressure vessels

20
Still Atmospheric Drag
21
Atmospheric Drag Cleans Up
22
High Vacuum Contaminating?
  • Sublimation of materials (outgassing)
  • Contaminants deposit on sensitive surfaces
  • UV radiation leads to polymerisation of organic
    molecules

23
Cleanliness Engineering
  • Material selection
  • No Cadmium, Zinc, Magnesium, plastics
  • Only special adhesives, and lubricants for
    mechanisms
  • Outbaking of volatile materials, all equipment
  • Typ. 3 days _at_ 80 C in vacuum
  • Contamination Budget Analysis
  • Contamination monitoring and control during AIT

24
Thinking Clean, Working Clean
SCIAMACHY optical instrument integration in Clean
Room 100 conditions
25
Effective Absence of Gravity
  • An advantage or a disadvantage?
  • What happens to an astronaut when he swings a
    hammer and hits the nail?
  • Where is my liquid propellant in the tank?
  • Structures designed for weightlessness may not be
    testable on grounddesign for testability!

26
Solar Array Deployment Test
Test Engineering
27
Solar and Cosmic Radiation
  • Flying through a plasma of charged particles
    (protons, electrons, heavier ionized atoms)
  • Typ. 450 km/s
  • How to shield or harden your electronics design?
  • What about static charging?

28
OMI Instrument Proton Shielding
  • Concept without and with shielding

Ref Dutch Space OMI PSR Sep 2002
29
Diversity of Requirements
30
Managing Risk of Failures
  • Ensure projects conservative approach
  • Track weaknesses found in the design analysis,
    manufacturing, test and operations
    RAMS Engineering
  • Standardisation of design and development
  • ECSS European Cooperation for Space
    StandardizationECSS-E-20A Electrical and
    Electronic
  • www.ecss.nl

31
Need for Systematic Approach
  • High complexity, high development risk
  • Little time to iterate
  • No chance to inspect or repair in orbit
  • Aiming for near-absolute reliability!
  • Systems Engineering
  • First things first
  • First time right!

32
High Speed Line Tunnel Drilling
  • Complex systems, Multidisciplinary, Safety,
  • Many interfacing parties

33
Systems Engineering Method
  • Structured development process
  • User requirements driven
  • Timely integration of all disciplines
  • Well motivated choices between all options
  • Visibility/traceability
  • Control
  • With the end product always in mind

34
Space System Development Flow
Systems Engineering flow in time
  • Requirements discovery
  • Development philophy
  • Cost break-down
  • Resource budgeting
  • Risk map

Requirements flow-down and traceability Design
options trade-offs Verification planning
35
Space System Development Flow
In depth
36
Spacecraft Subsystems
Guidance, Navigation Control
Computer Data Handling
37
Wrap-Up Space Engineering
  • Challenging functions performance
  • For a very different environment
  • Involving many (special) disciplines
  • Systems Engineering approach to do the first
    things first and do it the first time right
  • Based on requirements
  • Structured and controlled
  • Space engineering is done with numbers
  • In-depth analysis, testing, tracking,
    documentation

38

39
Web Links Used
  • http//www.esa.int and http//envisat.esa.int
  • (sheets 8,10,13,15,16,17)
  • www.delftaerospace.com (sheets 8,9,26)
  • http//seds.lpl.arizona.edu/nineplanets (sheet
    12)
  • http//www.ee.surrey.ac.uk (sheet 14)
  • http//science.nasa.gov/ (sheets 20,21)
  • www.dutchspace.nl (sheet 22,24)
  • http//www-istp.gsfc.nasa.gov/Education (sheet
    27)
  • www.ecss.nl (sheet 29)
  • www.highspeed.nl (sheet 31)
  • www.loesje.org (sheet 37)
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