Tuesday, September 8, 2015

LightSail Solar Sail Ends Test Flight

The Planetary Society's impressive solar sail experiment has re-entered Earth's 

atmosphere, 

ending a successful test flight that sets the stage for an even more ambitious mission in 2016.
Called LightSail-A, the solar sail prototype launched into space on May 20 aboard an Atlas V rocket that also carried the U.S. Air Force's secretive X-37B space plane into orbit.  LightSail-A was packed inside a tiny cubesat satellite and unfurled its shiny solar sail on June 7.

"The LightSail test mission is officially over. Following a 25-day stay in low-Earth orbit, the spacecraft tumbled back into Earth's atmosphere Sunday afternoon," posted the Planetary Society's Jason Davis.
"A complete image of the spacecraft's solar sailswas downloaded on June 9, confirming the mission's primary objective of sail deployment had been met. But before engineers could get a picture from the opposite-side cameras, LightSail's radio began transmitting a continuous, nonsensical signal, and the spacecraft stopped responding to commands," Davis explained.

Satellite watcher, Ted Molczan in Canada, told Inside Outer Space that the sail's decay was near 55 S, 32 W – about 2,800 miles (4,500 kilometers) east of the Falkland Islands.
Molczan said that orbital analysis reveals that with the spacecraft deploying its solar sails, the craft rapidly spiraled toward its demise.
"For an object to descend from orbit so rapidly may seem non-intuitive, but it was due to LightSail-A's large ratio of surface area to mass, which was 500 to 1,000 times that of typical spacecraft and rocket bodies," Molczan said.

What next?

What's ahead is a follow-on solar sailing test flight now slated for late 2016.
According to Mitchell Walker of Georgia Tech, LightSail-B will be packaged within Prox-1, now targeted for a September 2016 liftoff on the Space Test Program-2 (STP-2) mission on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy booster.
LightSail-B will be deployed from Prox-1 once on-orbit, Walker told Inside Outer Space.
The Prox-1 mission will demonstrate automated trajectory control for on-orbit inspection of a deployed CubeSat. The Prox-1 spacecraft has been designed, fabricated and tested by a team of Georgia Tech undergraduate and graduate students who will also be responsible for mission operations.

Close proximity

The Prox-1 will deploy The Planetary Society's LightSail solar sail spacecraft. Prox-1 will fly in close proximity to the LightSail, demonstrating automated trajectory control based upon relative orbit determination using infrared imaging.
Visible images of the LightSail solar sail deployment event will be acquired and downlinked by Prox-1.
The Prox-1 mission will also provide first-time flight validation of advanced Sun sensor technology, a small satellite propulsion system, and a lightweight thermal imager. The mission is funded by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, through the University Nanosatellite Program.
For a video that captures the Georgia Tech team's thoughts as they monitor the first deployment of the LightSail-A satellite, May 20, 

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