Caption: NASA’s laser retroreflector array arriving for inspection and approval.
Credit: Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd.
NASA delivered the first flight hardware for the Lunar Pathfinder mission
to ESA (European Space Agency), which formally accepted the instrument on Nov.
4. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, developed the instrument, a laser retroreflector
array, which will test new navigation techniques for lunar
missions.
NASA and ESA plan to launch Lunar Pathfinder via a future Commercial Lunar
Payload Services delivery. In addition to testing
navigation capabilities, Lunar Pathfinder will operate as a commercial
communications relay satellite and provide communications services for
exploration missions on the lunar surface.
The Lunar Pathfinder mission is led by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd
(SSTL), and ESA arranged for the mission to provide communications services to
NASA. Teams from NASA, ESA, and SSTL completed inspections when the laser
retroreflector array arrived at SSTL’s facility in Guildford, U.K., where it
will be installed in the satellite.
Laser retroflectors are mirrored devices that reflect light back at its source; engineers
can bounce laser signals off the arrays to precisely measure the position of
the spacecraft and check the performance of Global Navigation Satellite
Systems (GNSS) capabilities around the Moon.
Validating and developing these capabilities will help NASA navigate as it
travels to and explores the Moon with the Artemis missions.
In addition, the retroreflectors will allow NASA to learn more about lunar
science and space geodesy, which uses satellite measurements of celestial bodies to understand their
structure.
The Artemis missions are bringing humans back to the Moon and will test the
technologies needed to one day journey to Mars. NASA is doing this through
collaborative agreements with international partners and commercial companies.
Delivery of the laser retroreflector array is the first milestone completed in
a memorandum of
understanding between NASA and ESA that the agencies
signed in June.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, furnished the Lunar Pathfinder mission with the retroreflector array with oversight from the Space Communications and Navigation (SCaN) Program, located at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC and with support from the U.S. National Geospacial-Intelligence Agency. The retroreflector array is designed and manufactured by Kellogg Brown & Root (KBR), a science and engineering solutions company. The Lunar Pathfinder spacecraft is being built by Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. in partnership with ESA.
By Mariah Pulver
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA
Delivers First Flight Hardware to ESA for Lunar Pathfinder | NASA
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