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Hermes

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Title: Hermes


1
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2
Hermes
  • Space Based Migration Tracking Platform
  • Princeton University
  • Spacecraft Design Team
  • August 1st, 2006

3
Hermes A space-born solution to grand
challenges in environmental biology
  • How can one track the migratory patterns of small
    winged birds, bats, and insects?
  • Migrations of hundreds of kilometers per day
  • Often over dense foliage or water

4
From start to finish
  • Student run design project
  • 12-week design course
  • First 6-weeks Two-team satellite design
    competition, similar to what is often seen in
    industry.
  • Final 6-weeks Merge best ideas from both
    designs, focus on subsystems.

AVsat Preliminary Design
Winged Animal Migratory Behavior Observatory
Avian Tracking Satellite
5
Why Track Small Animals? Social Concerns
  • Spread of Disease
  • Avian Flu, rabies, West Nile Virus
  • Birds are vectors
  • Prediction of migration patterns enables
    preventative measures
  • Economic safeguard
  • Crop protection
  • Early warning
  • Pattern detection
  • Ecosystem Services

Starling Swarm
6
Why Track Small Animals? Scientific Concerns
  • Ecological Conservation
  • Track and study rare species
  • Identify a network of sites to ensure stopover
    habitats for migrating birds
  • Scientific Knowledge
  • Understanding navigation techniques
  • Accurate models of migration patterns
  • Behavioral and ecological studies

7
Migration routes What we know
5,000,000,000
8
Why dont we know more? Most birds/mammals are
too small to track!
Proportion of species
Small birds/bats Insects
Large enough to carry ARGOS-type satellite tag
Body size (log g)
9
Cant We Track Them From Earth?
  • Not well. Weve tried that.
  • Tagging
  • Tag it and hope someone else catches it
  • Radar
  • Trucks (and other ground-based methods)
  • Time constraints
  • Limited range
  • Costly
  • Birdwatchers identify calls
  • Basic Patterns are too complicated
  • Intercontinental range
  • Long migrations
  • Nonstop flights

10
Tracking From Space
  • Advantages
  • Global Coverage
  • Unmanned
  • Continuous surveillance
  • Tracks large volume
  • Small cost to track extra animals
  • ARGOS
  • Tracks larger animals
  • Doppler shift
  • Very effective
  • Problem cant be used to track small animals
  • Transmitters too big!
  • Need a satellite designed to track low-power
    signals!!!

11
The future of biotelemetry
NEON National Ecological Observatory Network
12
Designing Hermes Scientific Goals
  • Reception Must receive RF signals from
    transmitter small enough to not affect migratory
    behavior
  • Resolution Must be able to differentiate between
    multiple birds in view at the same time
  • Duration Remain in operation for 10 years
  • Coverage Continuous, global coverage every 4
    days
  • Quantity Uniquely track hundreds of animals

13
The Scientific Payload
  • Signal Acquisition
  • Bird Identification and Location
  • Digital Sampling and Storage
  • Data Downlink

14
Signal Acquisition
15
Signal AcquisitionTransmitters
  • We are assuming use of Sparrow Systems 1g
    transmitters
  • Peak power output of 1-2 mW, isotropic
  • Frequency range selectable by harmonics of 75 MHz
    crystal
  • Pulse frequency 10 ms limits battery life

Swenson, Wikelski, Smith. Tracking
very-low-power ground transmitters from near
earth orbit
16
Frequency Selection
  • 100 MHz and 360 MHz available
  • Lower noise and better transmission through
    foliage at 360 Mhz
  • Less power needed to transmit at 100 MHz
  • ? 360 MHz selected
  • Max Doppler shift 4.7 kHz
  • Max carrier drift 2.5 kHz

17
Signal Acquisition
Link Budget
10
Pt Transmitter Power 1 mW Ll Line loss
.1 La Atmospheric Loss 1 Ls Space loss c2
/ (16 p2 R2 f2) Gt Transmitter Gain 1 Gr
Receiver Gain T System Noise Temperature 350
K B Bandwidth 100 Hz
18
Antenna Gain Profile
  • At 485 km orbit, S/N gt10 out to 29.
  • ? Beamwidth 58 degrees
  • ? Swath width 540 km

19
Offset Parabolic Reflector
  • Manufactured by Applied Aerospace Structures
    Corp.

Boresight Vector
Focal Point
Aperture (diameter)
Feed Axis
Axis of Rotation
Focal Length
Parent Parabola
Offset
20
Bird Identification and Location
  • How to go from incoming signal to bird ID and
    location?

21
Identifying Birds
  • Transmissions received from different locations
    on the Earth have different frequencies due to
    Doppler shift
  • Birds also transmit different frequencies due to
    clock oscillator drift
  • But what if two or more birds are in the same
    location on the same frequency? How do we tell
    which bird were looking at?
  • ? Use an encoding scheme

22
Pulse Code Modulation
  • Assign a unique binary code to each bird
  • - 1 corresponds to transmitter on
  • - 0 corresponds to transmitter off
  • Set each birds transmitter to pulse on/off in a
    sequence of 10-ms pulses
  • Allows multiple users to transmit data at the
    same frequency
  • This is the encoding scheme used by GPS!

23
Unique IDs
  • Science requirement need to track 1000 birds
  • A code can be used more than once in different
    regions
  • Within a region, simultaneous transmissions will
    add e.g. 1100011 0000110 1001101 2101222
  • Need orthogonal codes (Gold codes)

24
Determining Location
  • Once we know which birds contribute to the
    incoming signal, we must determine their
    locations within the swath width
  • ?Use the Doppler shifts of received frequencies
    for this task

25
Doppler Shift
The base frequency will be set by the crystal
oscillator shift, which can be quantified as the
inflection point of the curve.
26
Satellite Ground Track
  • Assume bird is stationary
  • Velocity over ground track is the vector sum
    of the earths rotation and the satellites
    speed in space

27
Uncertainty
  • The pointing error of ADC produces an uncertainty
    in position of approx. 10 km.
  • This is a difference in relative
  • velocity of 156.3 m/s (worst case).
  • To detect a bird to this accuracy,
  • we must be able to detect a Doppler
  • shift frequency of approx. 200 Hz
  • in the 360 MHz signal (approx. 4
  • of the total Doppler shift).

28
Data Sampling
  • 2 types of information in signal
  • Bird ID code
  • Time dependent Doppler frequency info for
    positioning
  • Amplify signal using low noise amplifier
  • Beat down signal real-time using local
    oscillator
  • Store signal digitally and compute on ground

29
Data Sampling
  • Space computer sampling limit 50 MHz
  • Data must be stored at twice signal frequency
  • Need 10 bits/sample to identify 1024 birds
    simultaneously
  • Dump data to ground station 4 times per day
  • Triggered data storage store only when seeing
    signal
  • ? Conservative estimate store 10 of time in
    air
  • Solid state storage limit 4 GB ? 2 GB with
    margin
  • ? Beat signal down to 370 kHz

30
CommunicationsSending and receiving data
10101110110110110101010101101100
1010111011011011010101010110110
Aaron Prescott Philip Kang Cameron Wheaton
10101110110110110101010101101100
10101110110110110101010101101100
31
Science Data Link
  • Ground Stations
  • 3.6 meter diameter
  • X-Band
  • Ground stations based at Princeton and Copenhagen
  • Lower recurring costs
  • Satellite Antenna
  • Wide Coverage
  • Higher gain at longest path length
  • 70º Half Angle Coverage
  • No space-based pointing requirement

32
Designing the Link
Minimum Signal-to-Noise Ratio 10.5 dB
Transmitter Power 50 Watts Transmitter Gain 5
dB Frequency 8.4 Ghz Line Loss -1.0 dB
Space Loss -173dB
11010101000101010100101010111010101000010101101001
0101010100101010010100100101
Atmospheric Loss -0.5 dB
Path Length 1400km
Receiver Gain 47.4 dB Pointing Loss -1.0 dB
Noise Temperature 220K
33
Engineering Link
  • Main Ground Station Svalbard
  • Access every pass approximately every 84
    minutes
  • Can link to NASA ground network, and NASA TDRS

Saab-Ericsson S-Band Conical Helix Antenna
  • Frequency 2-2.15GHz
  • Mass 240g
  • Power 10W
  • Highest gain at 70, ideal for link at worst
    point in pass

Emergency Omni
34
Summary
  • Transmitting engineering data is trivial (high
    Eb/No)
  • May be able to install smaller S-band dishes at
    Princeton and Copenhagen
  • Svalbard is pay per pass, and expensive over time
  • Emergency access at any point in the orbit
  • Hardware
  • Two S-band wide coverage antennas
  • Two S-band transponders one for redundancy

35
Hermes Mission Analysis
Steven Batis Dominique Van de Sompel
36
Orbit Parameters
  • Circular Orbit, Altitude 485 km
  • Repeating Ground Track
  • Dawn-Dusk Sun Synchronous
  • Inclination 97.35º
  • Full Coverage in approximately 61 orbits, or 3.6
    days

37
Groundtrack
3 orbits
38
Groundtrack
10 orbits
39
Number of Accesses
2.5 days
40
Number of Accesses
4 days
41
Average Number of Accesses
4 days
Average Number of Accesses in 4 days ? 2.7
42
3D Orbit Animation
43
Launch Vehicle
  • Taurus 2210 Launch Vehicle
  • Ground-launched version of Pegasus
  • Approximate cost 24 million

Taurus Users Guide http//www.orbital.com/NewsIn
fo/Publications/taurus-user-guide.pdf
44
Hermes Propulsion
Coleman Richdale Jeff Stein Ronnie Zownir
45
Propulsion
Thruster Configuration
  • Understanding the orbit degradation
  • 18 m altitude lost every orbit due to drag at
    485km altitude
  • ?V 11m/s lost each year
  • 8 thrusters aligned parallel to velocity vector
    on two faces
  • Rotation about two axes
  • Translation along one axis
  • Altitude maintenance
  • Redundant system for momentum dumping

46
Propulsion System Diagram
47
Hermes Power
Eric Whitman Crawford Hampson Loan Le
48
Light Intensity
49
Full Circuit Diagram
- 2 m2 solar arrays produce 511 W at end of
life - Lithium-Ion battery stores 1120 W-hours of
energy - System mass 37 kg with 15 margin
50
Attitude Determination and Control Subsystem
  • Vera Dadok
  • Jeff Hill
  • Adam Reif

51
Disturbance Torques
  • Primary external disturbances
  • Aerodynamic
  • Gravity Gradient
  • Solar Radiation Pressure
  • Primary internal disturbances
  • Misaligned/Mismatched Thrusters
  • Residual Spacecraft Dipole
  • Flexibility and Sloshing

52
ADC Hardware
  • Proposed Sensors
  • 2 Coarse Sun Sensors
  • 2 Horizon Sensors
  • GPS w/ Attitude Capability
  • Magnetometer
  • Proposed Actuators
  • 4 Reaction Wheels
  • 3 Torque Rods
  • Backup Thrusters

53
Metrics
54
Computing Subsystem
  • Daniel Moser
  • John-Paul Mitchell

55
Computing Requirements
  • Receive and store data from payload at 50Mhz
  • Transmit data to downlink antenna at 70Mbits/sec
  • Control actuators based on orientation data
    received from ADC
  • Regulate power bus
  • Control low frequency events of other subsystems
    (ie fire thrusters)

56
6 x RH3000 SPM
RH3000 CPU 39 MIPS Each
512 KB Boot EPROM -EDAC
Internal Bus -EDAC -Auto Memory
Scrubbing -Resource Controller and Address
Interface
64 MB DRAM -EDAC
2 MB User EEPROM -EDAC
4 GB RAM Storage
40 Mbps Serial Port gt ADC, Thrusters, Payload
Comm. Module gt Power, ADC
Redundant MIL-STD-1553 and Fiber-Optic Bus
57
Hermes Structure
  • Fatou Bintou Sagnang
  • Erik Kroeker
  • Azuka Chikwendu

58
Primary Structure
59
Additional Schematics
60
Internal Structure
61
Static loading analysis
-Analysis based on maximum accelerations at
launch 10g axial, 2.5 g lateral -Model
approximated as beam structure with point masses
for secondary structure components -Analysis
done in Pro-E and Mechanica
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Hermes Thermal Control Design Analysis
Steve Farias Dean Sandin Jeffrey Byrne
64
Sources of Heat and Radiation
65
Spacecraft Pro-Engineering Analysis
Rear Exterior View
Rear Inside View
Front Exterior View
Front Inside View
66
Thermal Control
Exterior Coatings Front a .9 Front and
Back eIR .85 Heat Pipes The best way to
reduce the temperature range between sun side
and back side panels. Require 3 Pipes 1.5
diameter 3 kg gt200 W transferred Aluminized
Kapton sheeting - to prevent thermal radiation
losses on sides, top, and bottom of hull -
eIR 0.05 Heat tape used during eclipses to
keep batteries within acceptable temperature
range
Heat Tape
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Mission Recap
  • Can track 129 unique signals to within 10km
  • Taurus 2210 launch vehicle, Vandenburg Air Force
    Base
  • 97.35 inclined, 485 km circular orbit
  • 360 MHz transmission frequency
  • 1mW required ground transmitter power
  • 1.8 m offset parabolic reflector
  • 336 kg total mass
  • 365 W steady state, 945 W peak power
  • 300 kg available for secondary payload
  • 10 year nominal mission lifetime

69
www.IcarusInitiative.org
Webmaster Erik Kroeker
70
Acknowledgements
  • Prof. Wikelski, Princeton EEB Dept.
  • Prof. Swenson, U. of Illinois
  • Prof. Kasdin, Princeton MAE Dept.
  • Prof. Choueiri, Princeton MAE Dept.
  • Prof. Lyon, Princeton Electrical Eng. Dept.
  • Prof. Joe Taylor, Princeton Physics Dept.
  • Prof. Kasper Thorup, University of Copenhagen
  • Prof. Per Enge, Stanford Univ.
  • Dr. Jack Gelfand, Princeton Psychology Dept.
  • Joe Troutman, Ocean Power Corp.
  • Shey Sabripour, Lockheed Martin
  • Justin Likar, Lockheed Martin
  • Erik Lier, Lockheed Martin
  • Hamilton Wong, Lockheed Martin
  • Bob Danielak, Lockheed Martin
  • Niel Haneman, Lockheed Martin
  • Mayk Kalachian, Spectrolab
  • Dawn Valero, Applied Aerospace Structures Corp.
  • L3 Communications Cincinnati Electronics
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