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Date: |
Oct 9, 2007 8:24 PM |
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Subject: |
Dawn Journal: Firing Up the Ion Propulsion System |
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Dawn Journal: Firing Up the Ion Propulsion System
Oct. 9, 2007 | 15:37 PDT | 22:37 UTC
Here's the latest Dawn Journal entry, contributed by Dawn Project
System Engineer,
Marc Rayman.
Dear Xedawnions,
Joining an elite club among spacecraft,
Dawn uccessfully fired up its xenon ion propulsion system on
October 6. This important milestone in Dawn's 80-day checkout phase
followed ongoing work by the mission operations team members to
become accustomed to flying this new spacecraft, as they continue
monitoring telemetry, adjusting onboard parameters, and conducting
special activities to keep the spacecraft performing smoothly.
The ion propulsion system (in the interest of environmental
responsibility, we will conserve keystrokes in this log by using the
acronym IPS) will be used to climb away from the Sun, pass Mars,
rendezvous with Vesta, maneuver into different orbits around it to
provide the science instruments with varied views of the alien
world, leave orbit, push still deeper into space to dwarf planet
Ceres, and orbit it for the same scientific scrutiny. All systems on
the spacecraft are complex and important (the relative importance
was considered on
September 17, 2006 and
October 29, 2006), but the IPS has been the focus of the Dawn
team in recent days.

Artist's concept of Dawn spacecraft. Image credit: NASA/JPL
While the 3 ion thrusters are the most familiar part of the IPS,
they are not its only elements. The system includes 2 computer
controllers (only 1 is used at a time). When mission control selects
1 of the 112 throttle levels (each corresponding to a certain power
consumption and thrust), the operating controller translates the
command into the currents and voltages that must be applied to parts
of the thruster and the flow rate of xenon propellant to the
thruster. The controller also provides the principal communications
between the main spacecraft computer and the rest of the IPS,
accepting commands and reporting on the IPS performance. While the
controller is the brain of the system, the 2 power units (again,
only 1 is used at a time) are the brawn. Following instructions from
the controller, a power unit receives power from the solar arrays at
about 100 volts and converts it to more than 1000 volts for use by
the thruster.
On October 2, a controller and a power unit were activated and
verified to be operating correctly. When that was complete, those
devices were turned off and the other ones were powered on and
checked out.
The 3 ion thrusters are mounted on different
parts of the spacecraft. The one located along the central axis
of the spacecraft (at the "bottom" in many depictions) is known
affectionately as thruster #3, and that was the focus of this past
week's tests. The thruster near the visible and infrared mapping
spectrometer (on what might be considered the "back" of the
spacecraft) is thruster #1. Given that sophisticated nomenclature,
the astute reader might presume that the thruster near the main
antenna (on the "front" of the spacecraft) is thruster #2. As our
readers are well known all to be astute, it will be no surprise that
indeed that is its designation.
Each thruster is mounted to a gimbal system that allows the
direction it is pointed to be changed by a few degrees. The angle is
not large; the total range corresponds to less than the movement of
the minute hand of a clock in 3 minutes. While the purpose of IPS is
thrusting is to propel the spacecraft in its orbit (around the Sun
now, and later around Vesta or Ceres), the attitude control system
uses the thrust as one of its means to control the spacecraft's
orientation by slowly swiveling the thruster. The gimbal for
thruster #3 was commanded to execute a preprogrammed set of
movements on October 2, and its health was verified.
Some of the components in the thrusters are very sensitive to
contamination, particularly water. While every effort was made to
prevent air, and its normal inventory of water vapor, from becoming
trapped in the system while on Earth, it is inevitable that some
stray molecules of water would be in the stainless steel lines that
deliver xenon to the thrusters and in the thrusters themselves. To
reduce the presence of contaminants, several days of activities were
devoted to purging the system by baking it out. Around noon PDT on
October 2, mission controllers transmitted commands to raise some
parts of the spacecraft to about 50 degrees Celsius (approximately
120 degrees Fahrenheit). The temperatures were restored to normal
values 30 hours later.
As most space enthusiasts know, October 4 was the 50th anniversary
of the launch of Sputnik 1 and, quite remarkably given the different
calendric system, the 5,000,050th anniversary of the first mission
to the eventual site of the
Tribute to Coincidence. The Dawn project recognizes with great
admiration those missions and all others that have ventured into
space in the pursuit of knowledge and the spirit of exploration. As
the Dawn team prepared for the day's activity, 7 days after launch,
the spacecraft was almost 2300 times farther from Earth than Sputnik
1 was at its maximum range. Yet Dawn's journey is still just
beginning, and its travels should take it more than 250 times still
farther from home.
To ionize its propellant, the thruster bombards the xenon atoms with
electrons, as explained on
December 28, 2006. The device that emits electrons was heated
for several hours on October 4 as another step in preparing the
thruster for operation.
The last operation before thrusting, undertaken on October 5, was to
ionize xenon inside the thruster but not accelerate the propellant,
obliging the IPS to do almost everything required for normal
thrusting.
Because the thrust is so gentle, there are no sensors on board that
directly measure it. To verify that the thruster performs as
expected, the remarkable accuracy of the techniques of deep-space
navigation are employed. With measurements of the change in the
frequency (or pitch) of the radio signal, engineers can calculate
the change in the spacecraft's speed. This capability relies on the
Doppler effect, which is familiar to most terrestrial readers as
they hear the pitch of a siren rise as it approaches and fall as it
recedes. Other readers who more commonly travel at speeds closer to
that of light recognize that the well-known blueshift and redshift
are manifestations of the same principle, applied to light waves
rather than sound waves. Although like all spacecraft built by
humans, Dawn's speed is only a tiny fraction of the speed of light,
with the astonishing sensitivity of the Doppler measurements, the
gradual effect of the thrusting can be sensed. With the spacecraft
coasting away from Earth at more than 3.3 kilometers per second
(7400 miles per hour), the radio measurements can detect changes
smaller than 0.5 millimeters per second (less than 6 feet per hour).
Snails take note.
Others take note that the speed relative to Earth is most assuredly
not the speed relative to the Sun. The spacecraft is in its own
orbit around the Sun, and at this point in the mission, it is
traveling at about 33.1 kilometers per second (74,000 miles per
hour) in that orbit. This writer and others on his homeworld are
orbiting the Sun at 29.8 kilometers per second (66,700 miles per
hour). The difference is the speed at which Dawn is leaving Earth.
The Doppler effect applies only for motion toward or away from the
observer; movement across the line of sight does not change the
pitch of the signal. Therefore, to maximize the effect in the test
of the IPS, the thruster should propel the spacecraft toward or away
from Earth. With the present relative positions of Earth, our
favorite interplanetary probe, and the Sun, when thruster #3 is
pointed toward Earth, the incident sunlight, in combination with the
heat generated by the operation of the thruster itself, would cause
the unit to overheat. With the thruster pointed directly away from
Earth, the temperature is fine. That has the curious consequence of
engineers choosing to propel the spacecraft toward Earth during the
first thrust test.
The objective of all the thrusting during the first 80 days of the
mission is not to change the spacecraft's trajectory but rather to
evaluate the performance of all systems and prepare for the
thrusting after this checkout phase. As the effect of the ion
propulsion only becomes significant after long intervals, the short
thrust periods for testing do not cause important changes in the
trajectory.
On October 6, the mission control team instructed Dawn to turn to
point thruster #3 away from Earth. Following that, and after one
final verification that all onboard systems were healthy and ready
for the next step, the command to initiate thrusting was sent. The
drama was captured in the stirring name of the file that was
transmitted to the spacecraft: dz002e.scmf. (Our readers who are not
versed in neutron star orbital opera may not fully appreciate the
drama of that name and are requested to accept that others may find
great passion in the command file name.)
In the silent depths of space, far from its designers and
controllers, connected to Earth only by the faintest whisper of a
radio signal, Dawn dutifully executed the programmed steps. The
craft had no appreciation of the hopefulness of its terrestrial
handlers as it began emitting a bluish beam of xenon ions at 6:07 pm
PDT.
When data revealing the thruster's electrical currents and voltages
showed up in mission control, the excitement remained controlled but
was clearly rising much much faster than the gradual acceleration of
the spacecraft. Experienced team members, huddled around the
monitors in mission control, kept in mind that while starting
thrusting was wonderful progress, success required sustaining it.
Within 5 minutes though (in fact, shortly after
4.5 minutes for team members who also worked on Deep Space 1),
the enthusiasm could no longer be contained, as all indications were
that Dawn was quite content to keep thrusting.
Much of the joy was in sharing the success with colleagues who have
worked very very hard together for years, each perhaps with his or
her own personal motivations and rewards, but each contributing to a
common goal of pushing the frontiers of space exploration. Still
more of the happiness is in sharing the accomplishment with
supportive family members and friends -- and loyal readers! While,
like launch, this is but one more step in Dawn's very long journey
to unlock the secrets of Vesta and Ceres, it is an important one,
and the many feelings of having a probe in powered flight in deep
space are all -- well, perhaps "out of this world" is the best
descriptor.
The test sequence operated the IPS at throttle level 28 (in the
range from 1 to 112) for nearly 12 hours. Next, it throttled up to
level 49, and then it pushed still higher every 4 hours after that,
operating at levels 70, 91, and finally 112. Thrust was commanded
off on October 7 at 7:12 pm as the test completed successfully. In
about 25 hours of thrusting, the acceleration amounted to 3.6 meters
per second (8 miles per hour), truly negligible compared to the
spacecraft's speed relative to Earth or the Sun.
After the checkout phase, except in special circumstances, Dawn
always will use the highest throttle level it can. As it travels
farther from the Sun, eventually its enormous solar arrays, the most
powerful ever used on an interplanetary spacecraft, will not produce
enough power to permit operation at level 112, so the IPS will be
throttled down. That is why it is necessary to certify operation
over a range of throttle levels.
In addition to the Doppler measurements to reveal the thrust,
engineering data were collected on the performance of the IPS,
attitude control system, electrical power system, thermal control
system, and all other onboard participants in the thrusting. More
tests are ahead for thruster #3 as well as the other thrusters and
other spacecraft systems.
As of 10:00 p.m. PDT on October 7, 2007, when I wrote this, Dawn is
3.21 million kilometers (2.00 million miles) from Earth or more than
8 times farther than the moon. Radio signals, traveling at the
universal limit of the speed of light, take more than 21 seconds to
make the round trip.
source:
The Planetary Society Weblog |
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