Title: Rob Gowen and Alan Smith
1MoonLITE and LunarEX
- Rob Gowen and Alan Smith
- Mullard Space Science Laboratory, UCL
- PI Penetrator consortium
2Mullard Space Science Laboratory
- A department of University College London
- Established in 1967
- gt200 sounding rockets and gt35 satellite missions
- 150 Staff and research students
- Provided hardware or calibration facilities for
16 instruments on 14 spacecraft currently
operating including NASA Swift, Cassini, Soho - In-house mechanical and electrical engineering
design, manufacture and test - Provided stereo cameras for Beagle-2
- Leading PanCam development for EXOMARS
Hinode Launch 22-9-06
3Consortium
- Birkbeck College London
- Lunar Science (Ian Crawford)
- Open University
- Large academic planetary group (Cassini Huygens
Probe) - Science and instrumentation(Ion trap
spectrometer, etc) - Imperial College London
- Micro-Seismometers
- Surrey Space Science Centre and SSTL
- Platform technologies, delivery system
technologies - Payload technologies (drill)
4Consortium
- Southampton University
- Optical fibres
- University of Leicester
- XRS (beagle2/Mars96)
- Aberystwyth
- Science (Chandrayaan-1)
- QinetiQ
- Impact technologies
- Platform delivery systems technologies
- Astrium (in discussion)
- Platform delivery systems technologies
5What are Penetrators ?
- Instrumented projectiles
- Survive high speed impact 300 m/s
- Penetrate surface few metres
- An alternative to soft landing
- Lower cost and low mass gt multi-site deployment
6Penetrator Heritage
- Lunar-A tested but not yet flown
- DS-2 tested but failed at Mars
- Mars-96 lower speed impact, tested but failed
to leave Earth Orbit - Innumerable ground trials of instrumented shells
- Validated impact modelling tools
When asked to describe the condition of a probe
that had impacted 2m of concrete at 300m/s a UK
expert described the device as a bit scratched!
Courtesy QinetiQ
7Penetrator Design Concept
- Payload
- IMPACT ACCELEROMETER
- SEISMOMETERS/TILTMETER
- WATER/VOLATILES (ISRU DETECTION)
- GEOCHEMISTRY
- HEAT FLOW
- DESCENT CAMERA
- Platform
- S/C SUPPORT
- AOCS
- STRUCTURE
- POWER/THERMAL
- COMMS
- CONTROL DATA
- HANDLING
DETACHABLE PROPULSION STAGE
POINT OF SEPARATION
PAYLOAD INSTRUMENTS
PENETRATOR
DESCENT MODULE
- ESTIMATED PENETRATOR SIZE
- LENGTH 50cm
- DIAMETER 15cm
- MASS 10-13Kg
8MoonLITE/LunarEX - Mission Description
- Delivery and Communications Spacecraft
(Orbiter).Deliver penetrators to ejection orbit,
provide pre-ejection health status, and relay
communications. - Orbiter Payload 4 Descent Probes (each
containing 10-15 kg penetrator 20-25 kg
de-orbit and attitude control). - Landing sites Globally spaced Far side, Polar
region(s), One near an Apollo landing site for
calibration. - Duration gt1 year for seismic network. Other
science does not require so long (perhaps a few
Lunar cycles for heat flow and volatiles much
less). - Penetrator Design Single Body for simplicity
and risk avoidAnce. Battery powered with
comprehensive power saving techniques.
9MoonLITE/LunarEX Mission Sequence
- Launch cruise phase
- Deployment
- Deploy descent probes from lunar orbit, using a
de-orbit motor to achieve near vertical impact. - Attitude control to achieve orientation of
penetrator to be aligned with velocity vector. - Penetration 3 metres
- Camera to be used during descent to characterize
landing site - Telemetry transmission during descent for health
status - Impact accelerometer (to determine penetration
depth regolith mechanical properties) - Landed Phase
- Telemeter final descent images and accelerometer
data - Perform and telemeter science for 1year.
10MoonLITE/LunarEX Mission Sequence
- Launch cruise phase
- Deployment descent
- Landed phase
11MoonLITE Science
- The Origin and Evolution of Planetary Bodies
Water and its profound implications for life
andexploration
NASA Lunar Prospector
12Science Polar Volatiles
- A suite of instruments will detect and
characterise volatiles (including water) within
shaded craters at both poles - Astrobiologically important
- possibly remnant of the orginal seeding of
planets by comets - May provide evidence of important cosmic-ray
mediated organic synsthesis - Vital to the future manned exploration of
- the Moon
Prototype, ruggedized ion trap mass-spectrometer
Open University
NASA Lunar Prospector
13Science - Seismology
- A global network of seismometers will tell us
- Size and physical state of the Lunar Core
- Structure of the Lunar Mantle
- Thickness of the far side crust
- The origin of the enigmatic shallow moon-quakes
- The seismic environment at potential manned
landing sites
14Science - Geochemistry
- X-ray spectroscopy at multiple, diverse sites
will address - Lunar Geophysical diversity
- Ground truth for remote sensing
Leicester University
XRS on Beagle-2
K, Ca, Ti, Fe, Rb, Sr, Zr
15Science Heat Flow
- Heat flow measurements will be made at diverse
sites, telling us - Information about thecomposition and thermal
evolution of planetary interiors - Whether the Th concentration in the PKT is a
surface or mantle phenomina
NASA Lunar Prospector
16Payload
- Core
- Seismology
- Water and volatile detection
- Accelerometer
- Desirable
- Heat Flow
- Geochemistry/XRF
- Descent camera
- Mineralogy
- Radiation Monitor
Ion trap spectrometer (200g, 10-100amu) (Open
University)
17Key Technologies
- Batteries Availability (Lunar-A)
- Communications A trailing antenna would require
development - Structure material (Steel or Titanium, carbon
composite under consideration) - Sample acquisition
- Thermal control (RHUs probably needed for polar
penetrators) - AOCS (attitude control and de-orbit motor)
- Spacecraft attachment and ejection mechanism
18Penetrator Development Programme
- Phase 1 Modelling (until Jan 2008)
- Key trade studies (Power, Descent, Structure
material, Data flow, Thermal) - Interface System definition
- Penetrator structure modelling
- Procurement strategy
- Phase 2 Trials (until Jan 2010)
- Payload element robustness proofing
- Penetrator structure trials
- Payload selection and definition
- Baseline accommodation
- Phase 3 EM (until Jan 2012)
- Design and Qualification
- Phase 4 FM (until Jan 2013)
- Flight build and non-destructive testing
Generic
Mission Specific
19Current activities
- Generic penetrator development
- Funded (gt600k) under MSSL rolling grant
- Started in earnest in April 07
- Full-scale trials March 2008
- National Programme
- MoonLITE
- Research Council commissioned a mission study by
SSTL (delivered in Late 2006) - Proposed as national mission under current
Comprehensive Spending Review. Indications
expected in October/December 2007 - NASA/BNSC bi-lateral study
- ESA Cosmic Visions Programme
- LunarEX (backed by industrial studies)
- Jupiter-Europa
- Titan-Enceladus
20Conclusions
MoonLITE - A focused mission with clear
objectives based on a strong technology background
- Penetrator website
- http//www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/planetary/missions/Micro
_Penetrators.php
21MoonLITE / LunarEX UK
Rationale
- Scientifically focussed
- Precursor to future
- penetrator programmes
- High public interest
- Impetus to industry
- Affordable
22Examples of hi-gee electronic systems
- Designed and tested
- Communication systems
- 36 GHz antenna, receiver and electronic fuze
tested to 45 kgee - Dataloggers
- 8 channel, 1 MHz sampling rate tested to 60 kgee
- MEMS devices (accelerometers, gyros)
- Tested to 50 kgee
- MMIC devices
- Tested to 20 kgee
- TRL 6
MMIC chip tested to 20 kgee
Communication system and electronic fuze tested
to 45 kgee