Title: Space Engineering:
1Space Engineering A World of DifferenceIr. A.
Kamp a.kamp_at_lr.tudelft.nlhttp//as.lr.tudelft.nl
Delft University of TechnologyAstrodynamics
Satellite Systems
2Space Remoteness from Earth
- Our familiarity with
- Protective Earth atmosphere
- 1-G environment
- Accessibility for repair/inspection
- Is partly lost in Space Engineering
3What Makes It So Different?
- Space different and strange environment
- Demanding performance requirements
- Complex systems
- Multidisciplinary
- Severe safety
- High availability
- Many interfacing parties
4Top ClassComplexity, Safety, Availability,
Interfaces
5Complex 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
6Objective 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
7What 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!
8Space Difficult To Get In
Antenna
Acoustic loads
box
Random loads
LVA
Steady State SinusShock loads
9Dimensioning Instruments, Electronic Boxes, Etc
Size your equipment to withstand the static load
factors and the severe random vibrations
60
5
10Mechanical Engineering
- In-depth analysis
- Stress
- Dynamic and Acoustic
- Thermal distortion
- Fatigue
- Micro-vibration
- Mass budgeting
- Structural testing(random vibrations, acoustic,
shocks)
11Space 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
12Hot and Cold
- Solar flux densityon earth 500 W/m2 in space
1400 W/m2 - Earth surface 293 K cold space 4 K
- No convection
13Hot and Cold
- Without special measures material temperatures in
earth orbitmay vary between 270 and 130 C
14Good Performance Only If
- Narrow temperature ranges
- Electronics typically 10/ 40 C
- Batteries - 5/ 15
- Hydrazine fuel 9/ 40
- Limited thermal gradients
- Adequate thermal stability
15ENVISAT Thermal Protection
- Thermal blankets
- Superior insulation
- Radiators
- Rejection of heat
16ENVISAT Thermal Protection
- S/C bottom
- battery compartment inside view
17ENVISAT Thermal Protection
- S/C bottom
- battery compartment radiator surfaces
18Thermal 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
19High Vacuum
- Immediately life threatening
- Engines have to carry fuel and oxidizer
- Risk of cold welding
- Risk of inadvertent pressure vessels
20Still Atmospheric Drag
21Atmospheric Drag Cleans Up
22High Vacuum Contaminating?
- Sublimation of materials (outgassing)
- Contaminants deposit on sensitive surfaces
- UV radiation leads to polymerisation of organic
molecules
23Cleanliness 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
24Thinking Clean, Working Clean
SCIAMACHY optical instrument integration in Clean
Room 100 conditions
25Effective 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!
26Solar Array Deployment Test
Test Engineering
27Solar 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?
28OMI Instrument Proton Shielding
- Concept without and with shielding
Ref Dutch Space OMI PSR Sep 2002
29Diversity of Requirements
30Managing 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
31Need 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!
32High Speed Line Tunnel Drilling
- Complex systems, Multidisciplinary, Safety,
- Many interfacing parties
33Systems 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
34Space 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
35Space System Development Flow
In depth
36Spacecraft Subsystems
Guidance, Navigation Control
Computer Data Handling
37Wrap-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 39Web 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)