Title: Small%20Satellite%20Opportunities%20at%20Wallops%20Flight%20Facility
1Small Satellite Opportunities atWallops Flight
Facility
- Dr. John Campbell
- Director, Wallops Flight Facility
2The Small Satellite Paradox
- Small satellites are not funded (nor built)
because of a lack of affordable launch
opportunities - and
- Affordable small satellite launch capabilities
have been slow to emerge due to a limited market
3Small Satellite Launch Enablers
- Low-cost small launch vehicles
- Inexpensive responsive launch ranges
- Ride sharing
4Low-Cost Launch Vehicles
- Get-Away Special Hitchhiker once served as the
premier means for orbiting small satellites - New small ELVs are moving to fill the void
- Minotaur I, IV, V
- SpaceX Falcon 1
- Etc.
- Essential characteristics of new vehicles
- Simple pad infrastructure
- Short time from arrival at range to launch
- Much lower cost per pound than current vehicles
- Streamlined range support requirements (e.g.,
data services, personnel accommodations)
5Small Launch Vehicle OptionsConducted from
Wallops
6Small Satellites to the Moon
- Small ELVs (e.g., Minotaur V) launched from
Wallops can transport 350-500 kg (payload is
50) to the Moon - Can provide low-cost options for Science and
Exploration needs - Remote sensing orbiters
- Impacters
- Small landers
- Communication navigation orbiters
7Small Satellite Launch Enablers
- Low-cost small launch vehicles
- Inexpensive responsive launch ranges
- Ride sharing
8Launch Site on Wallops Island
9Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS)
- MARS owns 2 launch complexes at Wallops
- Used for Wallops small-to-medium class ELV
missions - MARS is a VA MD sponsored partnership with NASA
chartered to pursue commercial aerospace
opportunities at Wallops - Current agreements enable efficient work with
Wallops, using multiple business models - NASA support of MARS commercial launches
- MARS support of NASAs government launches
10Wallops Operating Areas
- Wallops operational areas offer nearly unlimited
mission capabilities - Restricted NASA-controlled airspace encompasses
Launch Range Research Airport - NASA airspace provides direct access to Atlantic
Ocean for hazardous mission operations - Wallops location geography provides the most
efficient access to desirable mid-inclination
orbits of 38-60 degrees
11Low-Cost Responsive Range Operations
- Wallops Launch Range is right-sized for small
spacecraft missions - Small spacecraft missions not competing against
large ELVs or Shuttle - Staff facilities sized for small orbital
missions - Wallops has a history reputation for supporting
emerging, low-cost launch vehicles - Schedule flexibility allows for development
mission complications - Safety project support culture of assisting
projects during development
12Launch Site Integration Flow
Spacecraft Plus Upper Stage Arrival L-30 days
Pad L-14 days
Launch!
Range Control Center
Lower Stages Arrival L-30 days
Blockhouse 3
13Minotaur I Launch _at_ Wallops
14Small Satellite Launch Enablers
- Low-cost small launch vehicles
- Inexpensive responsive launch ranges
- Ride sharing
15Ridesharing
- Small ELVs are still larger than necessary for
many small satellites - Multi-manifesting of small ELVs is critical to
ensuring that Micro-Explorer spacecraft (50-200
lbs.) mature as a viable class of spacecraft - Wallops has developed the Multi-Payload Ejector
as a key enabler to exploit small ELVs for
spacecraft smaller than 1000 lbs.
16Multi-Payload Ejector
- MPE able to carry gt800 lbs. of individual
spacecraft - 1 primary (up to 200 lbs.)
- 6 secondaries (up to 100 lbs. each)
- 12 CubeSat tertiaries (up to 3 lbs. each)
- Flexible
- Configurable for any launch vehicle, as primary
for smaller ELV secondary for larger ELVs - Can be flown as 1, 2, or 3 segments allowing
trade-offs on individual spacecraft masses/volume
orbital altitude - Low-cost simple
- Completes payload deployments within ½ orbit
- Motorized spring deployments (no pyrotechnics)
- Sounding rocket qualified timers
- Single input from launch vehicle initiates all
MPE events - Launch vehicle provides only necessary
guidance/control - Rapid Integration
17MPE Integration Flow
Spacecraft IT
MPE Integration
Vehicle Integration Test
. . .
Spacecraft (S/C) Development Test
S/C Arrival _at_ Wallops
MPE Integration with ELV
S/C Receiving Inspection
S/C Integration with MPE
T-4 weeks
T-3 weeks
T-2 weeks
T-1 week
Launch Day
18MPE Simulation
19Small Satellite Launch Costs by the PoundNot by
the vehicle
- Component Costs, w/o Spacecraft (Wallops Launch)
- MPE (NASA) 1.5M
- IT (NASA) 300K
- Range Services (NASA) 1.5M
- Launch Vehicle 16M (assumes Minotaur I)
- TOTAL 19.3M
- Payload Capacity (MPE 3-stack configuration)
- MPE Structure 300 lbs.
- 1 primary spacecraft 200 lbs.
- 6 secondary spacecraft (100 lbs. each) 600 lbs.
- 12 Cubesats (3 lbs. each) 36 lbs.
- Total Spacecraft mass for 19 spacecraft 836 lbs
- Cost per payload mass
- Minotaur I 23K/payload lb.
- Falcon I 13.5K/payload lb.
20Small Satellite Launch Enablers
- Low-cost small launch vehicles
- Inexpensive responsive launch ranges
- Ride sharing