DocumentCode
304141
Title
Performance of International Space Station electric power system during station assembly
Author
Hague, Lisa M. ; Metcalf, Kenneth J. ; Shannon, George M. ; Hill, Robert C. ; Lu, Cheng-Yi
Author_Institution
Rocketdyne Div., Rockwell Int. Corp., Canoga Park, CA, USA
Volume
1
fYear
1996
fDate
11-16 Aug 1996
Firstpage
154
Abstract
The International Space Station (ISS) will be an Earth-orbiting laboratory in space. It will house experimental payloads, distribute resource utilities, and support human habitation for conducting research and science experiments in a microgravity environment. The ISS will be assembled on-orbit through 44 assembly and utilization flights using the launch vehicles of the United States, Russian Republic and the European Space Agency (ESA) over a 5-year period. Electrical power is a major utility to support successful achievement of the mission goal. The ISS United States on-orbit segment (USOS) electric power system (EPS) power generation capability will vary throughout the assembly phase with orbital parameters, various assembly configurations, various flight attitudes, and shadowing on the solar arrays. Power capability will be further influenced by EPS operational constraints, such as array pointing biases, battery charging and hardware limitations, natural and induced environment, hardware aging and by ISS operational constraints either to avoid long term solar array shadowing from the adjacent solar array or to accommodate ISS maneuvering during proximity operations with other space vehicles, mating, and departing. Design of the ISS USOS EPS takes into consideration the various equipment degradation modes, operation constraints and orbital conditions to make it compatible with the environments and to meet power, lifetime and performance requirements. This paper emphasizes USOS EPS performance during ISS assembly
Keywords
assembling; photovoltaic power systems; solar cell arrays; solar cells; space vehicle power plants; International Space Station; assembly performance; launch vehicles; on-orbit segment electric power system; power capability; power generation capability; power system design; solar arrays; Assembly systems; Hardware; Humans; International Space Station; Laboratories; Payloads; Phased arrays; Shadow mapping; Space stations; Space vehicles;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, 1996. IECEC 96., Proceedings of the 31st Intersociety
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
ISSN
1089-3547
Print_ISBN
0-7803-3547-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IECEC.1996.552863
Filename
552863
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