Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1764971 | Advances in Space Research | 2011 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
CubeSail is a nano-solar sail mission based on the 3U CubeSat standard, which is currently being designed and built at the Surrey Space Centre, University of Surrey. CubeSail will have a total mass of around 3Â kg and will deploy a 5Â ÃÂ 5Â m sail in low Earth orbit. The primary aim of the mission is to demonstrate the concept of solar sailing and end-of-life de-orbiting using the sail membrane as a drag-sail. The spacecraft will have a compact 3-axis stabilised attitude control system, which uses three magnetic torquers aligned with the spacecraft principle axis as well as a novel two-dimensional translation stage separating the spacecraft bus from the sail. CubeSail's deployment mechanism consists of four novel booms and four-quadrant sail membranes. The proposed booms are made from tape-spring blades and will deploy the sail membrane from a 2U CubeSat standard structure. This paper presents a systems level overview of the CubeSat mission, focusing on the mission orbit and de-orbiting, in addition to the deployment, attitude control and the satellite bus.
Keywords
ultra-high frequencyCOTSMicro electro-mechanical systemsADCSLEOVHFOBCSRPPWMACPEPSSRAMPCBUHFCubeSatBCRMEMSSolar sailSpace debrisPrinted Circuit BoardStatic random access memoryElectrical power systemCMOSCADComputer-aided designSolar radiation pressureLow earth orbitPulse width modulationcenter of massCenter of pressureComplementary Metal-Oxide SemiconductorAttitude controlDeployment
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Vaios Lappas, Nasir Adeli, Lourens Visagie, Juan Fernandez, Theodoros Theodorou, Willem Steyn, Matthew Perren,