Cryogenic propulsion for the Titan Orbiter Polar Surveyor (TOPS) mission
Autor: | Daniel S. McGuinness, X. Li, Matt Devine, Shuvo Mustafi, A. Hedayat, W. Willis, Conor A. Nixon, Sara Riall, Lloyd Purves, John Francis, C. H. DeLee |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Propellant
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences business.industry In-space propulsion technologies General Physics and Astronomy Cryogenics 01 natural sciences law.invention Astrobiology symbols.namesake Orbiter law 0103 physical sciences symbols Environmental science General Materials Science Specific impulse Liquid oxygen Aerospace engineering 010306 general physics business Titan (rocket family) Liquid hydrogen 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Cryogenics. 74:81-87 |
ISSN: | 0011-2275 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cryogenics.2015.11.009 |
Popis: | Liquid hydrogen (LH2) and liquid oxygen (LO2) cryogenic propellants can dramatically enhance NASA’s ability to explore the solar system due to their superior specific impulse ( I sp ) capability. Although these cryogenic propellants can be challenging to manage and store, they allow significant mass advantages over traditional hypergolic propulsion systems and are therefore enabling for many planetary science missions. New cryogenic storage techniques such as subcooling and the use of advanced insulation and low thermal conductivity support structures will allow for the long term storage and use of cryogenic propellants for solar system exploration and hence allow NASA to deliver more payloads to targets of interest, launch on smaller and less expensive launch vehicles, or both. These new cryogenic storage technologies were implemented in a design study for the Titan Orbiter Polar Surveyor (TOPS) mission, with LH2 and LO2 as propellants, and the resulting spacecraft design was able to achieve a 43% launch mass reduction over a TOPS mission, that utilized a traditional hypergolic propulsion system with mono-methyl hydrazine (MMH) and nitrogen tetroxide (NTO) propellants. This paper describes the cryogenic propellant storage design for the TOPS mission and demonstrates how these cryogenic propellants are stored passively for a decade-long Titan mission that requires the cryogenics propellants to be stored for 8.5 years. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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