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Applications And Potentials Of Intelligent Swarms For Magnetospheric Studies

Authors :
Rajan, Raj Thilak
Ben-Maor, Shoshana
Kaderali, Shaziana
Turner, Calum
Milhim, Mohammed
Melograna, Catrina
Haken, Dawn
Paul, Gary
Vedant
V, Sreekumar
Weppler, Johannes
Gumulya, Yosephine
Bunt, Riccardo
Bulgarini, Asia
Marnat, Maurice
Bussov, Kadri
Pringle, Frederick
Ma, Jusha
Amrutkar, Rushanka
Coto, Miguel
He, Jiang
Shi, Zijian
Hayder, Shahd
Jaber, Dina Saad Fayez
Zuo, Junchao
Alsukour, Mohammad
Renaud, Cecile
Christie, Matthew
Engad, Neta
Lian, Yu
Wen, Jie
McAvinia, Ruth
Simon-Butler, Andrew
Nguyen, Anh
Cohen, Jacob
Source :
Acta Astronautica, Elsevier, 2021
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Earth's magnetosphere is vital for today's technologically dependent society. To date, numerous design studies have been conducted and over a dozen science missions have own to study the magnetosphere. However, a majority of these solutions relied on large monolithic satellites, which limited the spatial resolution of these investigations, as did the technological limitations of the past. To counter these limitations, we propose the use of a satellite swarm carrying numerous and distributed payloads for magnetospheric measurements. Our mission is named APIS (Applications and Potentials of Intelligent Swarms), which aims to characterize fundamental plasma processes in the Earth's magnetosphere and measure the effect of the solar wind on our magnetosphere. We propose a swarm of 40 CubeSats in two highly-elliptical orbits around the Earth, which perform radio tomography in the magnetotail at 8-12 Earth Radii (RE) downstream, and the subsolar magnetosphere at 8-12RE upstream. In addition, in-situ measurements of the magnetic and electric fields, plasma density will be performed by on-board instruments. In this article, we present an outline of previous missions and designs for magnetospheric studies, along with the science drivers and motivation for the APIS mission. Furthermore, preliminary design results are included to show the feasibility of such a mission. The science requirements drive the APIS mission design, the mission operation and the system requirements. In addition to the various science payloads, critical subsystems of the satellites are investigated e.g., navigation, communication, processing and power systems. We summarize our findings, along with the potential next steps to strengthen our design study.<br />Comment: Accepted in Acta Astronautica

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Acta Astronautica, Elsevier, 2021
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2107.01601
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actaastro.2021.07.046