A high inclination solar mission enabled by near-term solar sail propulsion

Les Johnson, Ken Kobayashi, Herbert D. Thomas, Scott McIntosh, David McKenzie, Jeffrey Newmark, Andy Heaton, John A. Carr, Mike Baysinger, Quincy Bean, Leo Fabisinski, Pete Capizzo, Keith Clements, Steve Sutherlin, Jay Garcia, Kamron Medina, Dana Turse

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

Our current understanding of the Sun, its atmosphere, and the heliosphere is severely limited by a lack of good observations of the Sun's polar regions. A High Inclination Solar Mission (HISM) mission would go into a 0.48-AU circular solar orbit with at least a 60° inclination to conduct long-term observations of the Sun's poles using both situ and remote-sensing instruments to study the connections between the Sun, the solar wind, and solar energetic particle events. The propulsion requirements to implement HISM are beyond the capability of conventional chemical propulsion and extremely challenging even for highly efficient solar electric propulsion. To enable HISM and a host of other propulsion-intense space science missions, NASA is actively developing solar sail propulsion, capable of continuous low thrust for the extended periods of time required to meet the ?V requirements of HISM. Upcoming solar sail missions include the Near Earth Asteroid (NEA) Scout (2021 planned launch) and Solar Cruiser (candidate for flight in 2024). Solar sails use sunlight to propel vehicles through space by reflecting solar photons from a large, highly-reflective sail. This continuous photon pressure provides propellantless thrust, allowing for very high ?V maneuvers on long-duration, deep-space exploration. Since the Sun supplies the necessary propulsive energy, solar sails require no onboard propellant, thereby potentially increasing useful payload mass. The NASA MSFC Advanced Concepts Office recently completed a detailed mission concept study of HISM based on the solar sail propulsion technologies being developed for NEA Scout and Solar Cruiser. The HISM spacecraft concept envisions carrying a Doppler & Stokes Imager, a coronagraph, magnetometer, Faraday Cup, a plasma spectrometer, and a radio and plasma wave package to meet the science objectives established for a solar polar orbiting mission in the Heliophysics Decadal Survey. This paper will describe the mission concept and its solar sail propulsion system.

Original languageEnglish
JournalProceedings of the International Astronautical Congress, IAC
Volume2020-October
StatePublished - 2020
Externally publishedYes
Event71st International Astronautical Congress, IAC 2020 - Virtual, Online
Duration: Oct 12 2020Oct 14 2020

Keywords

  • In-space propulsion
  • Solar sail
  • Solar science

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A high inclination solar mission enabled by near-term solar sail propulsion'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this