Mission Capability Assessment of CubeSats Using a Miniature Ion Thruster

The successful miniaturization of many spacecraft subsystems make CubeSats attractive candidates for evermore-demanding scientific missions. A three-cell CubeSat employing the miniature xenon ion thruster, which features high efficiency and impulse capability, yields a unique spacecraft that can be...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of spacecraft and rockets 2013-09, Vol.50 (5), p.1035-1046
Hauptverfasser: Conversano, Ryan W, Wirz, Richard E
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The successful miniaturization of many spacecraft subsystems make CubeSats attractive candidates for evermore-demanding scientific missions. A three-cell CubeSat employing the miniature xenon ion thruster, which features high efficiency and impulse capability, yields a unique spacecraft that can be optimized for a variety of missions ranging from significant inclination changes in a low Earth orbit to lunar transfers. A nominal configuration of a high-ΔV CubeSat has a dry mass of approximately 6.3 kg, including a 0.75 kg payload, margins, and contingencies. Depending on the thruster and propellant tank configuration, this CubeSat is capable of delivering mission ΔV values from 1000 to over 7000  m/s, enabling low-Earth-orbit inclination change missions and lunar missions. A parametric analysis on a three-cell high-ΔV CubeSat bus revealed that a range of payload volumes (up to nearly 1.4 units) and masses (up to nearly 6 kg) can be accommodated depending on the ΔV requirements and mission type. Additionally, this analysis showed that a high-ΔV three-cell CubeSat in a 600 km low Earth orbit can be designed to provide an inclination change of over 80 deg.
ISSN:0022-4650
1533-6794
DOI:10.2514/1.A32435