Senior Space Systems Design Mars Scout Project Guidelines - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Senior Space Systems Design Mars Scout Project Guidelines

Description:

Science goals and objectives are based on the current state of knowledge and the ... Investigations must be performed in the Mars system (no Earth-based observations) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:47
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: willia412
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Senior Space Systems Design Mars Scout Project Guidelines


1
Senior Space Systems DesignMars Scout Project
Guidelines
  • Spring Semester 2005

2
Mars Scout 2011
  • Competitive-award of robotic exploration mission
    established by Science Mission Directorate of the
    National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
  • PI-led mission
  • 2011 launch
  • Less than 450M (FY07)
  • Proposals for Mars Scout investigations that
    involve complete spaceflight missions including
    the experiment hardware, the spacecraft, launch
    services, mission operations, and science team
    data analysis (including archiving).
  • Investigations proposed as Mars Scouts may
    include remote observations from Mars spacecraft
    missions that deploy aerial, landed, or
    penetration systems to study the Mars surface,
    interior, geopotential fields, deep subsurface,
    and/or sample return missions.
  • Mars Scouts are intended to complement, extend or
    amplify and not duplicate core missions currently
    being planned as part of NASAs Mars Exploration
    Program or those planned by foreign space
    agencies.

3
Mars Science Strategy
4
MEPAG Scientific Goals and Priorities
  • MEPAG has created a document outlining the
    science goals and priorities in each of four
    broad categories.
  • Science goals and objectives are based on the
    current state of knowledge and the scientific
    questions that we are asking.
  • The four broad categories are
  • Past and present life,
  • Atmosphere and climate,
  • Geology and geophysics, and
  • Human exploration.
  • First report published in 2001 (R. Greeley et
    al.). Updated in response to new discoveries and
    recognized limitations in 2004 (G.J. Taylor et
    al.), and seen as a living document.
  • Currently undergoing revision primarily in the
    area of Goal IV, dealing with measurements
    relevant to human precursor missions.

5
Example of Science investigation details from
community-based inputs (MEPAG)
Example of the breadth of science that needs to
be done !
6
(No Transcript)
7
MEP The Next Decade
8
Popular Science Magazine March 20032007 Mars
Scout Final Four
9
2007 Phoenix Scout Mission
10
2007 Competed Scout Mission Phoenix
  • First in-situ investigation of existing surface
    and subsurface water, and assessment of
    habitability zones
  • Odyssey data indicating ubiquitous water
  • Mobility not required
  • First of the Mars/Scouts competitively selected
    missions
  • PI Peter Smith, University of Arizona
  • Leverages existing MSP01 lander components, and
    MSP98 instrument designs
  • Currently conducting thorough engineering
    heritage assessment of S/C prior to PDR /
    Confirmation Review

11
Team Assignments
  • Teams have approximately 15 weeks to develop a
    pre-Phase A mission and system concept and the
    associated proposal.
  • Teams responding to this AO are responsible for
    all aspects of a stand-alone space flight mission
    to be launched no later than December 31, 2011.
  • Proposals for Mars Scout investigations will
    require careful tradeoffs between science yield,
    implementation risk, cost and schedule to produce
    investigations that return the highest possible
    science impact for the lowest possible cost.

12
Proposal Development Schedule
  • Jan 10 First day of class
  • Jan 26 NASA Mars Scout program Karen McBride,
    NASA HQ
  • Feb 23 Concept Design Review
  • Mar 2 Proposing to Win Bob Stilson, Consultant
  • Mar 21-25 Spring break, no class on Mar 21 or
    Mar 23
  • Mar 30 Draft Proposal Due
  • Apr 6 Draft Proposal Review
  • Apr 27 Final Proposal Due, Final Presentations
  • Apr 29 Last day of classes
  • May 2 RASC-AL written report due (1-2 teams)
  • May 9 Grades posted
  • May 22-25 RASC-AL Competition (1-2 teams)

13
External Interaction Support
  • Brown University (possible) Mars Science
  • Arizona State University (possible) Mars Science
  • Dr. Mark Adler, JPL Review Board Member
  • Andy Etters, JPL Review Board Member
  • Dr. Brian Killough, NASA LaRC Review Board Member
  • Henry Wright, NASA LaRC Review Board Member
  • Dr, John Olds Review Board Member
  • Bob Thompson Review Board Member
  • Bob Stilson, Consultant Proposing to Win
  • Karen McBride, NASA HQ Program Executive
  • Dr. Joel Levine, NASA LaRC Mars Science

14
Level 1 Requirements
  • Phase A project start December 2005 (target)
  • Launch no later than December 2011
  • Total life cycle cost lt 450M(FY07)
  • Investigations must be performed in the Mars
    system (no Earth-based observations)
  • Mission and system concept must complement,
    extend or potentially amplify science results of
    core Mars program
  • Complete mission flight system (no
    instrument-only missions)

15
Project Deliverables
  • Design concept review Oral presentation, Feb 23
  • Draft Proposal Report (due Mar 30)
  • Oral presentation ( Apr 6)
  • Final Proposal Report (due Apr 20)
  • Oral presentation (Apr 27)

16
Proposal Topics
  • Science objectives
  • What they are
  • Why they are important
  • Relation to core Mars program and MEPAG
  • Measurement requirements
  • Type, location and quantity of measurement
  • Instrument selection
  • Implementation options
  • Major trades considered
  • Design drivers and decision rationale
  • Baseline mission
  • Baseline architecture description
  • Mission system
  • Flight system
  • Mass and power estimation, margins
  • Design drivers
  • Descope options including description of
    performance floor
  • Project management approach
  • Cost and schedule

17
First-Order Questions Proposals Must Address
  • Do the proposed Mars Scout science objectives
    complement, extend, or amplify core Mars program
    results?
  • Is the implementation approach traceable from the
    measurement requirements, and are these in turn
    traceable from the science objectives?
  • Have the proper trades been performed to bound
    the design space in selection of an appropriate
    baseline?
  • Has the team struck the proper balance between
    science objectives, engineering feasibility,
    mission robustness and life-cycle cost?
  • Would you pay 450M for this science?

18
RASC-AL Competition
  • 1-2 teams will be selected to represent GA Tech
    in the RASC-AL National Design Competition, May
    22-25 in Cocoa Beach, Florida.
  • Travel support will be provide for all team
    members to attend this competition.
  • Teams selected will be required to develop a
    report and oral presentation, according to the
    RASC-AL competition guidelines.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com