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Structure and Thermal System |
| The mechanical structure of the Flying
Laptop is divided into the service module, the core module
and the payload module as shown in the figure below.
The launch adapter is attached to the back plane of the
service module. All modules are made of aluminium due to
its high heat conduction properties and easy machining.
In order to ensure the alignment of the visible and near
infrared cameras (VIS/NIR) to each other and to the star
cameras, all components are attached to an optical bench
made of carbon-fiber-reinforced plastic (CFRP). The focus
distance of the thermal infrared (TIR) camera and the Ka-band
antenna is also influenced by thermal extension. Hence,
the primary mirror and the retaining structure of the secondary
mirror will also be produced from the temperature stable
CFRP. For the TIR the primary mirror demands a medium surface
roughness of approx. 0.8 µm.
The thermal system of the Flying Laptop is intended
to be passive by using the dissipated heat of the internal
components. The surface is mainly covered by multi layer
insulation (MLI) and the heat is released by a radiator
on the back plane of the payload module.

Modular design of the Flying Laptop, a) Payload
Module, b) Core Module,
c) Service Module
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Power System |
| Power is generated by three solar panels
with triple-junction solar cells. Two panels are deployable.
The battery pack consists of 8 NiH2
cells and can deliver the required peak power consumption
of 300 W for the travelling wave tube.
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Attitude Control System |
| The satellite is 3-axis stabilized by
actuators, which consist of reaction wheels and magnetic
torquers. The four reaction wheels are aligned in a tetrahedron
configuration.and the three magnetic torquers (torque rods)
dump the momentum accumulated by the reaction wheels. The
moment of inertia in the x, y and z axis of the satellite
is estimated to be around 4 kgm².
The attitude motion is monitored by five different types
of sensors: a 3-axis magnetometer, a 4-pi coarse sun sensors
system, rate sensors, a star tracker unit with two camera
heads and GPS receivers. The Zarm AMR-magnetometer uses
a magneto-resistive sensor and has a digital interface.
For the measurement of the angular velocity, four fiber
optical rate sensors will be used. A star tracker, the micro
Advanced Stellar Compass (µASC), from the Technical
University of Denmark will provide a relative pointing knowledge
of up to 2 arcseconds. When the satellite is stabilized
and rotates with a slew rate of less than 1.2 °/s the
star tracker delivers regular attitude updates. To provide
full accuracy about all axes and to decrease the probability
of blinding during maneuvers, a second camera head unit
is mounted on the satellite with its optical axis tilted
away from the first one. To support accurate target-pointing
of the spacecraft during imaging and ground station contacts,
the satellite will be equipped with a GPS navigation system
consisting of three Phoenix receivers from DLR/GSOC.

Imaging Modes: A) Inertial- , B) Nadir- & C) Target-Pointing
Mode
For image acquisition three different attitude
control modes are defined and shown above: inertial-pointing
mode, nadir-pointing mode and target-pointing mode. In the
target-pointing, also known as spotlight mode, the satellite
points to a fixed spot on the surface of the earth during
a fly-over. This allows longer integration times for the
cameras which is a significant advantage for the scientific
measurements. The slew rate for this maneuver is 1 °/s
(max.) and follows a non-linear bell-shaped curve over time.
This is the most demanding mode of the satellite in terms
of control algorithms.
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 Payload |
| Beside the systems for technology demonstration
the Flying Laptop is equipped with two imaging payload instruments.
For the measurement of the BRDF a multispectral camera system
is implemented. This system consists of three single cameras,
one for each channel (green, red and near infrared), mounted
in a triangle mode. The system is directly controlled from
the OBC which also serves as data handling unit and will
take images with a ground sample distance (GSD) of 25 m
(1024 x 1024 Pixel). The resolution was chosen for co registration
of the thermal infrared images. All cameras are mounted
on a reinforced carbon fibre composite plate for better
alignment and thermal stability. Also mounted on this plate
are the star cameras for precise orientation of the imaging
system.
The second payload is a thermal infrared camera system for
images with a GSD of 50 m (320 x 240 Pixel). The camera
consists of a cassegrain mirror system (dual use system
described in the section technology demonstration), a relay
optic and a micro-bolometer sensor. Therefore no cooling
is necessary which makes the system small in size with low
power consumption and also cost effective.
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On-Board Computer System |
| The on-board computer (OBC) consists
of a 4-node FPGA computer.
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Communication System |
| For telemetry and telecommand VHF,
UHF (low gain) and S-band (low and high gain) antennas will
be installed on the satellite. Beside S-band communication,
VHF and UHF offers the possibility to utilize amateur radio
equipment. The 50 cm mirror of the Flying Laptop
works as a dual system. On one hand, it is the antenna reflector
for the Ka-band communication; on the other hand, it is
the primary mirror for the optical system of the thermal
infrared camera. The two wavelengths are separated with
the help of a beam splitter. By combining these two complex
systems a compact design is achieved which can be flown
on a micro-satellite. The use of a TWT is an unique feature
of this micro-satellite.
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System Simulation and Verification |
| Setting up a verification environment
for reliable system-wide tests is new to micro-satellite
projects, but it is one of the enabling technologies for
proving the required attitude control system accuracy. In
this context a software-based functional verification reduces
the check-out environment complexity and huge costs can
be saved.
This model-based verification environment for small satellite
applications is under development in close cooperation with
EADS Astrium and will be set up in parallel to the Flying
Laptop development. It is characterized by high real-time
capabilities to represent the spacecraft hardware system-wide
in its exact operational modes and response times. Software
models of the spacecraft components will be created successively
in adequate detail in order to provide the particular test
bench functionality. Latest commercial improvements in hardware
and software technology allow the real-time test benches
to be set up using standard computers and a Linux operating
system kernel which supports real-time performance.
A Software Verification Facility is in progress to support
the on-board software development process. It is used to
debug, validate and verify the on-board software and prove
the overall system dataflow functionality. Consisting of
a real-time simulator, an on-board computer simulator and
a central control system, it supports real-time or accelerated
software simulation of the whole spacecraft system by implementing
all components by its hardware-specific software models
into the simulation environment.
In the next step a FlatSat test bench with real-time performance
will be arranged as first hardware check-out environment
including only the on-board computer as hardware in the
loop. It will be set up well before spacecraft integration
using a test harness to maintain single component up to
system-wide check-out procedures. All component software
models, especially those of the attitude control system,
will be re-used in this environment to verify correct operation.
The third test bench is created as an expansion of the FlatSat
test bench and integrates additional spacecraft hardware
in the simulation loop. Single component check-out tests
will be followed by complete mission scenario simulations.
Finally the protoflight test bench supports a functional
verification test environment throughout the flight hardware
qualification process.
RTB Test Bench (source: EADS Astrium)
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