Title: The Hawaii Space Flight Lab and the LEONIDAS Project
1The Hawaii Space Flight Lab and the LEONIDAS
Project
NSF Workshop on Small Satellite Missions for
Space Weather and Atmospheric Research May 15,
2007
- Luke Flynn, Director HSFL
- Wayne Shiroma, Co-Director HSFL
- Lloyd French, Program Manager HSFL
- School of Ocean Earth Science Technology and
- College of Engineering
- University of Hawaii at Manoa
2HSFL Objectives
- Development of a reliable, low-cost,
rapid-response launch system capable of providing
1 3 year science and technological research
missions in low-Earth orbit. - Development of a training activity to create a
skilled technical workforce for future space
missions. - End-to-end small satellite development,
integration, launch, communications and telemetry
management. - Sustainable satellite integration and launch
activity through Pacific Missile Range Facility
(PMRF)/UH partnership. - Validation of space-borne hardware and
software. - 1st mission in FY09, 2nd mission in FY10.
Sustained rate of at least 1 mission per year. - Missions designated as Science and Technology
for the University (STU).
3Hawaii Space Flight Lab
- Collaborative program between the University of
Hawaiis School of Ocean and Earth Science and
Technology (SOEST) and College of Engineering
(CoE). - Connections through the Hawaii Space Grant
Consortium since 2001. - CoE provides small satellite engineering
experience - National Electrical Engineering Undergraduate
Students of the year in 2001, 2003 and 2005. - Engineering faculty specializing in nano- and
micro-sat design. - SOEST provides instrumentation design and science
applications - Faculty with instrument building experience.
- Faculty investigators on many NASA missions.
- HSGC provides NASA support
- Network of 52 space grant consortia in each State
as well as District of Columbia and Puerto Rico. - Grant funds for undergraduate and graduate
fellowships. - Connections to NASA Centers and NASA HQ through
Office of Education.
4Hawaii Space Flight Lab Org Chart
NASA, DoD, University Program Offices
HSFL Director
NASA/Hawaii Space Grant
External Partners
HSFL Management Team
Project Missions CoE
HSFL Administration HIGP
Spacecraft CoE, Industry
Integration Test CoE
Ground Stations HIGP
Data Management HIGP, Data Center
Instrument HIGP, CoE, Industry
Mission Operations HIGP, CoE
Launch UH, PMRF, KTF
5Partnership Chart (Support Roles)
- Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF)
- Local launch facility and mission support
elements - Workforce needs
- Environmental restrictions govern sizes of
potential launch vehicles - Kauai Test Facility (KTF)/ Sandia National Lab
- Heritage with solid rockets and missile design
- Heritage working with PMRF as on-site contractor
- Heritage with successful sub-orbital launches
- Will provide training for technical transfer to
University of Hawaii - NASA Centers (Ames and JPL)
- NASA Ames Director S. Pete Worden signed an MOU
with the Governor of Hawaii on March 8, 2007 to
explore collaborative research options. - Plans to collaborate on spacecraft and payload
development for STU-2 - JPL/Ames providing technical support and a
software experiment on the STU-1 UH
microsatellite
6How Will We Do This?
Integration and Test
Spacecraft
- Clean rooms in UH/POST will be used to assemble
satellites. - Systems integration
- Thermo-vac testing
- Vibration testing
- Launch vehicle component integration
- Partner with industry, NASA Centers (Ames and
JPL), and others to advance small spacecraft
design and capabilities. - Design, build, launch, and operate 40-kg small
satellite that can be configured for a variety of
science and educational tasks. - Support technology validation missions for
government agencies (NASA, DoD), as well as other
University or corporate missions.
- Draw from cadre of EE and ME students in CoE
CubeSat Small Satellite Group.
S/C Systems Avionics Power Telecom Thermal S/W H/W
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9PMRF UH Telemetry Plan for LEONIDAS (STU 1)
- Mission Operations Plan
- PMRF handles telemetry for first week of
operations. UHF uplink, S-band downlink - Hand-off and coincident data collection occurs
in 2nd mission week. - UH MOC handles operations after 2nd week.
- Mission Data Plan
- During 1st two weeks, data feed from Makaha Ridge
provided to UH MOC through PMRF - Data archived for UH MOC on DVD-ROM
- Matched systems allow for emergency PMRF back-up
in case of UH MOC failure.
10LEONIDAS Project
- LEONIDAS Low Earth Orbit Nanosat-Integrated
Defense Autonomous System - Original plan included chain of satellites to
pass information to a single ground station and
observe target area. - Satellite chain would be used for surveillance
and disaster relief efforts. - Small satellite networks can be more robust than
single larger satellites because nodes can become
inoperable but mission can still be accomplished.
11HSFL First Project LEONIDAS
- LEONIDAS starts with 4.0 Million in funding in
FY 07. - LEONIDAS project costs cover two launches and
two spacecraft. Partial cost-matches by NASA,
University of Hawaii, and the State of Hawaii. - Spacecraft would leverage less-expensive,
already-developed, Commercial-Off-The-Shelf
(COTS) systems. Stable platform for remote
sensing applications in 40-kg class. - Develop plug-and-play architecture for multiple
payload configurations. Satellite is low-cost
platform for flight validation of advanced
technologies. - NASA JPL/Ames vehicle health and autonomous
spacecraft software experiment on first mission. - LEONIDAS Missions 1 and 2 designated as
Science and Technology for the University (STU)
1 and 2. - Basic Mission Parameters for LEONIDAS-1 and 2
(STU-1 and 2) - Mission Objectives Remote Sensing
- Payload Mass 150 kg
- Orbit 400 km retrograde (1 3 year mission)
12Future and Benefits
- The HSFL will provide a gateway for
university-class and small satellite space
access. Potential to relieve log-jam of national
small satellite projects waiting for space
validation of hardware. - UH to provide student training opportunities from
spacecraft design to launch to on-orbit
operations. - Reliable, low-cost access to Earth orbit for
small payloads. - Total recurring cost is 9.0 million/launch
this cost can be subdivided between multiple
payloads. - Design payload adapter to reduce costs for
nanosat deployments. - Workforce development and training of the future
space industry. Links through NASA Space Grant
provide contacts to every State.
- More about the HSFL
- Justin Akagi Poster UH CubeSat Group
- Lloyd French Poster HSFL Organization and
Objectives
LEONIDAS Mentor and Team Members