PROBA-3

PROBA-3 is the third satellite mission in the European Space Agency's series of PROBA low-cost satellites that are being used to validate new spacecraft technologies while also carrying scientific instruments.

PROBA-3
Mission typeSolar observatory
technology demonstrator
OperatorESA
Websitelink
Mission duration2 years (nominal)
Spacecraft properties
ManufacturerSENER/QinetiQ/EADS CASA/GMV/SPACEBEL
Launch massCSC: 339 kilograms (747 lb)
OSC: 211 kilograms (465 lb)
Dry massCSC: 327 kilograms (721 lb)
OSC: 190 kilograms (420 lb)
DimensionsCSC: 1.1 by 1.8 by 1.7 metres (3.6 ft × 5.9 ft × 5.6 ft)
OSC: 0.9 by 1.4 metres (3.0 ft × 4.6 ft)
Start of mission
Launch dateMid 2022 (planned)[1]
RocketVega
Launch siteKourou ELV
ContractorArianespace
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeHighly-elliptical Earth Orbit
Semi-major axis36,943 kilometres (22,955 mi)
Eccentricity0.8111
Perigee altitude600 kilometres (370 mi)
Apogee altitude60,530 kilometres (37,610 mi)
Inclination59 degrees
Period1178 minutes
RAAN84 degrees
Argument of perigee188 degrees
Epochplanned
Main interferometer
NameASPIICS
TypeFabry–Pérot interferometer
Diameter50 millimetres (2.0 in)
Focal length1.15 metres (3.8 ft)
Wavelengthsvisible light
 

Overview

PROBA-3 will be composed of two independent, three-axis stabilized spacecraft flying at 150 meters to one another with the ability to accurately control the attitude and separation of the two craft. Their alignment with the Sun will be maintained for 6 hours, creating ″artificial solar eclipse″ for the back satellite. The spacecraft pair will fly a highly elliptical orbit divided between periods of accurate formation flying around apogee, when payload operations will be possible, and periods of free flight. The length of the formation control period will be a trade-off involving the increasing amount of fuel needed to maintain the orbits in formation when away from apogee.[2]

The primary mission of PROBA-3 is solar coronagraphy by using the telescope on the larger of the two satellites to view the Sun's corona while the other spacecraft is maneuvered to accurately occult the disc of the Sun.[3]

As of 2015, PROBA-3 was scheduled to be launched in 2020.[4] By 2018, the launch was delayed to the second quarter of 2021,[5] and by 2020 delayed again to mid-2022.[1] The mission is planned to have a nominal lifetime of around two years.

gollark: My laptop, and the servers.
gollark: There's also comms mode, though, used by heavdrones, which is effectively just a big key-locked channel for interlinking.
gollark: They can't.
gollark: Unprivileged potatoclients can send messages seen by the admins and receive messages from them; admins can send to the unprivileged ones and see the responses.
gollark: Of course not.

See also

References

  1. "About Proba-3". ESA. 10 February 2020. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
  2. "Mission / PROBA-3". ESA. 13 November 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  3. "Science Payload / PROBA-3". ESA. 13 November 2014. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  4. "ESA Bulletin 160 (November 2014)" (PDF). ESA. November 2014. p. 61. ISSN 0376-4265. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  5. Zhukov, Andrei (22 November 2018). PROBA-3/ASPIICS and its potential synergies with Solar Orbiter/Metis (PDF). 6th Metis Workshop. Göttingen: Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research. Retrieved 13 October 2019.
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