Space Situational Awareness of Large Numbers of Payloads From a Single Deployment

Alan Segerman (Naval Research Laboratory), Jeff Byers (Naval Research Laboratory), John Emmert (Naval Research Laboratory), Andrew Nicholas (Naval Research Laboratory)

Keywords: space object cataloguing, large deployments

Abstract:

The nearly simultaneous deployment of a large number of payloads from a single vehicle presents a new challenge for space object catalog maintenance and space situational awareness (SSA). Following two cubesat deployments last November, it took five weeks to catalog the resulting 64 orbits. The upcoming Kicksat mission will present an even greater SSA challenge, with its deployment of 128 chip-sized picosats. Although all of these deployments are in short-lived orbits, future deployments will inevitably occur at higher altitudes, with a longer term threat of collision with active spacecraft. With such deployments, individual scientific payload operators require rapid precise knowledge of their satellites’ locations. Following the first November launch, the cataloguing did not initially associate a payload with each orbit, leaving this to the satellite operators. For short duration missions, the time required to identify an experiment’s specific orbit may easily be a large fraction of the spacecraft’s lifetime. For a Kicksat-type deployment, present tracking cannot collect enough observations to catalog each small object. The current approach is to treat the chip cloud as a single catalog object. However, the cloud dissipates into multiple subclouds and, ultimately, tiny groups of untrackable chips. One response to this challenge may be to mandate installation of a transponder on each spacecraft. Directional transponder transmission detections could be used as angle observations for orbit cataloguing. Of course, such an approach would only be employable with cooperative spacecraft. In other cases, a probabilistic association approach may be useful, with the goal being to establish the probability of an element being at a given point in space. This would permit more reliable assessment of the probability of collision of active spacecraft with any cloud element. This paper surveys the cataloguing challenges presented by large scale deployments of small spacecraft, examining current methods. Potential new approaches are discussed, including simulations to evaluate their utility. Acknowledgement: This work was supported by the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for R&E, via the Data-to-Decisions program.

Date of Conference: September 9-12, 2014

Track: Space Situational Awareness

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