DocumentCode
3442925
Title
MARS science laboratory (MSL) cruise solar array
Author
Mardesich, N. ; Stella, P. ; Dodge, E. ; Buitrago, O.
Author_Institution
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
7-12 June 2009
Abstract
The solar array is required to supply sufficient power to the space craft as well as charging the lithium ion batteries at all stages of the mission. During the mission the solar array will be shadowed as well as Sun off pointing in all operating conditions. The two most demanding operations for the power system occur just into the final disc at spacecraft integration. Each section has two independently controlled solar array segments for a total of twelve segments. Each segment is comprised of twenty one parallel strings of fifteen cells in series, provided by Emcore Corporation. The array is designed to provide maximum power to fully charge the lithium ion batteries at the final insertion into Mars orbit. This safe mode condition requires that the solar array operate beyond the peak power point while in Earth orbit at the start of the mission. The batteries are located on the MSL rover and handle all power requirements between separation from the cruise array to augmenting the Rover RTG power system on the Mars surface. The solar array falls about 7% short of this goal due to the limited substrate area available. Through out the cruise to Mars the solar array is predicted to meet or exceed the program requirements. As part of the paper the theoretical power calculation compared to performance based measurements of array power will be presented as well as the array design.
Keywords
Mars; aircraft power systems; secondary cells; solar cell arrays; space vehicles; Emcore Corporation; Li; MSL rover; Mars science laboratory; cruise solar array; independently controlled solar array segments; lithium ion batteries; power system; space craft; spacecraft integration; Batteries; Laboratories; Lithium; Mars; Power supplies; Power systems; Space charge; Space missions; Space vehicles; Sun;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Photovoltaic Specialists Conference (PVSC), 2009 34th IEEE
Conference_Location
Philadelphia, PA
ISSN
0160-8371
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-2949-3
Electronic_ISBN
0160-8371
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PVSC.2009.5411353
Filename
5411353
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