• DocumentCode
    2268244
  • Title

    Evolvable navigation and communication infrastructure for lunar exploration

  • Author

    Stadter, P.A. ; Sharer, P.J. ; Guzman, J.J. ; Engelbrecht, C.S. ; Eng, D.A. ; Finnegan, E.J. ; Bussey, D.B. ; Spudis, P.D. ; Reed, C.L.B. ; Nozette, S.

  • Author_Institution
    Appl. Phys. Lab., Johns Hopkins Univ., Laurel, MD
  • fYear
    0
  • fDate
    0-0 0
  • Abstract
    The NASA Exploration Initiative provides a defining vision for the U.S. space program and an implementation of U.S. policy that will include a series of human and robotic missions to the Moon with a goal to thereby enabling ultimate exploration of Mars and other destinations. The success of this initiative will rest on the foundation of the initial lunar missions and the ability to develop the means for a sustained human presence on the moon. These missions can be aided and enabled by a navigation and communication infrastructure that can evolve in capability to support lunar operations and data collection. This paper describes a system concept for evolving a lunar navigation/communication infrastructure (LNCI). The described approach uses small spacecraft that are capable of launch as auxiliary payloads. The mission concept is detailed, including spacecraft design, payload concepts and performance estimates for navigation precision and communications coverage. A complete lunar infrastructure would provide global, persistent high-precision navigation and full communications connectivity among lunar elements and the Earth. Detailed herein is an approach for implementation of a prototype LNCI system that would provide navigation and communication services to near-term RLEP missions (e.g., RLEP2 through RLEP4) and demonstrate the LNCI concept such that sustainment of the capability could be transitioned to NASA operational elements and/or industry. The system consists of four small, cost-effective spacecraft that provide radio frequency (RF)-based navigation and communication services from polar orbits. The system concept is designed to evolve by providing improved navigation accuracy and increased communication coverage and bandwidth as additional spacecraft supplement the infrastructure
  • Keywords
    Earth; Mars; Moon; space communication links; space research; space vehicles; Earth; Mars exploration; Moon; NASA Exploration Initiative; US space program; auxiliary payloads; lunar exploration; lunar missions; lunar navigation/communication infrastructure; robotic missions; spacecraft; Humans; Mars; Moon; NASA; Orbital robotics; Payloads; Radio navigation; Robot vision systems; Space missions; Space vehicles;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Aerospace Conference, 2006 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Big Sky, MT
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-9545-X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/AERO.2006.1655847
  • Filename
    1655847