1. Electric Propulsion for the Psyche Mission: Development Activities and Status
- Author
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Johnson, Ian, Aghazadeh, Faraz, Lenguito, Giovanni, Kerl, Taylor, Mikellides, Ioannis G, Ortega, Alejandro Lopez, Hofer, Richard R, Goebel, Dan M, Chaplin, Vernon, and Snyder, John Steven
- Abstract
NASA’s Psyche mission will launch in 2022 and begin a 3.6-year cruise to the metallic asteroid Psyche, where it will examine this unique body. The baseline spacecraft design is a hybrid of JPL’s deep-space heritage subsystems with commercial partner Maxar’s electric propulsion, power, and structure subsystems. All primary propulsion will be done with SPT-140 thrusters, which will be the first use of Hall thrusters for a NASA mission. The electric propulsion subsystem and its implementation for the Psyche mission are described here. Major testing activities have included the successful completion of subsystem integrated testing with the design modifications required for Psyche, and a series of low-power thrust repeatability tests that were performed in support of navigation analyses. Thruster performance models have been further validated with new SPT-140 flight data, and new analyses of thruster swirl torque have been performed that result in much higher values than previously estimated. Analysis of recent Maxar flight data has also provided a new understanding of in-flight propellant usage uncertainties. Subsystem integration and test activities are now underway and the status and plans are discussed.
- Published
- 2020