by Jeff Foust, Monday, August 26, 2013
Virgin Galactic is developing LauncherOne, a dedicated smallsat launcher, and may be one of several companies pursuing a NASA contract for a single smallsat launch. (credit: Virgin Galactic) |
Over the last decade, and particularly in the last few years, small satellites have shown an increased potential to serve a variety of missions beyond their past roles as technology demonstration and educational missions. Smallsats, including very small CubeSats with masses of just a few kilograms, are now performing science missions, including monitoring space weather (see “CubeSats get big”, The Space Review, September 10, 2012). Earlier this year, Planet Labs, a startup backed by more than $10 million in investment, launched its first remote sensing smallsats, with plans to deploy a full constellation of such spacecraft as soon as this December (see “Smallsat constellations: the killer app?”, The Space Review, July 1, 2013).
“It’s that point in time where we need to start looking at this,” said Skrobot in regards to a dedicated nanosatellite launch vehicle. |
The NEXT step for smallsat launchers
This small shift back to dedicated launchers is illustrated by a new NASA solicitation for smallsat launch services. On August 7, NASA issued a request for proposals for the NASA Launch Services (NLS) Enabling eXploration & Technology, or NEXT, program. NEXT calls for purchasing one dedicated smallsat launch capable of placing at least 15 kilograms into a 425-kilometer orbit at an inclination of between 0 and 98 degrees. The selected mass is the equivalent of three “3U” CubeSats, spacecraft with dimensions of 30 by 10 by 10 centimeters and masses of no more than five kilograms.
“It’s that point in time where we need to start looking at this,” Garrett Skrobot of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center said in regards to a dedicated nanosatellite launch vehicle in a presentation August 11 at a CubeSat workshop at Utah State University in Logan, Utah. Unlike other NLS contracts, this vehicle won’t need to have a successful flight before being selected. “We’re looking at a high risk tolerance approach. The first one may go into the ocean. It’s high risk, and we’re going to go in knowing this.”
Companies have until September 9 to submit proposals for the NEXT RFP, and the winning company would carry out the launch by December 2016. Payment would be tied to a series of milestones, primarily in the form of several design and launch readiness reviews, with the final 20 percent reserved for the post-launch assessment report. The wining company would also be responsible for any launch range issues as well as getting a commercial launch license from the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation.
NEXT represents a new direction in NASA’s efforts to promote the development of dedicated smallsat launchers. Previously, NASA had sponsored a prize competition called the Nano-Satellite Launch Challenge, part of its Centennial Challenges prize program. That competition offered $3 million in prizes for vehicles that could launch a 1U CubeSats, weighing just one kilogram, into orbit and do it again within a week. However, NASA quietly canceled the competition last November, concluding that there was a lack of potential competitors not already involved in other government efforts to develop smallsat launchers, like the Army’s Soldier-Warfighter Operationally Responsive Deployer for Space (SWORDS) vehicle and DARPA’s Airborne Launch Assist Space Access (ALASA) program (see “A prize competition fails to launch”, The Space Review, December 3, 2012).
NEXT is targeting a somewhat larger—and likely more useful—market, as a number of companies and organizations are developing 3U CubeSats for missions, rather than original, smaller 1U version. The value of the NEXT contract is also likely to be larger than the prize purse of the Nano-Satellite Launch Challenge as well. However, the purchase of a single launch is unlikely to do much to close the business case for dedicated smallsat launchers; the imprimatur of NASA effectively endorsing that vehicle may be of more long-term value than the dollar amount of the contract itself.
“We’re trying to make this the cheapest launch vehicle in the world, because we’ve gotten the sense that that is important you,” said Pomerantz. |
“We’re trying to make this the cheapest launch vehicle in the world, because we’ve gotten the sense that that is important you,” Virgin Galactic vice president Will Pomerantz said to an audience of smallsat developers at the AIAA/USU Conference on Small Satellites in Logan on August 13. He said the company has done hardware demonstrations of most of the critical subsystems of LauncherOne, with formal announcements of the progress of the vehicle’s development planned for later year. “We are on pace and on schedule to meet the goal of having our first test flights in calendar year 2015 and initial commercial availability in 2016,” he said.
Pomerantz didn’t say if Virgin Galactic would respond to the NEXT RFP, but several other small launch vehicle developers are expected to do so. One, though, would prefer a different approach than what NASA is taking. “If NASA was serious about helping encourage commercial business develop new dedicated launch services for small satellites under 100 pounds, they should consider adopting the COTS and CCDev approach that is working successfully for commercial cargo and commercial crew services to the ISS,” wrote John Olds, CEO of Generation Orbit, in a company blog post on August 10. Taking that same approach, including the use of fixed-price, milestone-based Space Act Agreements for two to three companies, would at least be more preferable to Olds than the previous prize competition. “A COTS-style program might be a more appropriate approach and the NASA investment at this level of payload would be modest—easily less than 1% of what they’ve spent on COTS and CCDev,” he said.
Launching via the ISS
With those dedicated small launchers still a few years off, CubeSats and other smallsats under development now need to usually hitch a ride to space as a secondary payload on the launch of a larger spacecraft. NASA has, in recent years, provided new opportunities through its CubeSat Launch Initiative (CSLI), which flies primarily educational and government-built smallsats as secondary payloads on NASA and other US government missions. “It took a very long time to try and get CubeSats or P-PODS on a NASA vehicle,” said Skrobot, referring to the dispenser used to carry Cubesats as secondary payloads. The success of recent missions that carried CSLI payloads, including a NASA Delta II launch in October 2011 and an NRO mission last September, have opened up additional opportunities. Skrobot said 36 spacecraft are manifested for launch on upcoming NASA and military launches, with an equal number awaiting launch assignments.Upcoming launches include the Operational Responsive Space (ORS) 3 mission, slated for launch on a Minotaur I from Virginia in October, and the third SpaceX Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) cargo mission to the ISS, whose launch recently slipped to January 2014. Using CRS missions has been a little problematic for the program, Skrobot said, since sometimes there isn’t additional mass available on those missions to accommodate secondary payloads. “If there’s extra performance, they’ll let us have it,” he said, but that’s not always the case. CubeSats were bumped from the SpaceX CRS-2 mission in March, he said, because there wasn’t sufficient excess capacity on the mission.
“We do add some complexities most satellites aren’t used to,” Newswander said of launching from the ISS, referring to the station’s safety approval process. |
NASA is also examining using Kibo for the launch of somewhat larger smallsats. The Space Station Integrated Kinetic Launcher for Orbital Payload Systems, or SSIKLOPS (pronounced like “Cyclops”), is a payload adapter designed to accommodate satellites weighing up to 100 kilograms. “We’re trying to supplement or complement a lot of these different methods” of getting smallsats into orbit, said Daniel Newswander of the Johnson Space Center in a presentation at the smallsat conference.
Launching from the ISS offers some tradeoffs: the potential for a lower launch cost, but at the expense of complying with a more rigorous safety environment at the station. “We do add some complexities most satellites aren’t used to,” Newswander said. “Going through the International Space Station safety process can be laborious, it can be complicated, and it can be pricey, depending on what you’re trying to do.”
SSIKLOPS is currently manifested to launch next April on the SpaceX CRS-4 mission. That will carry two demonstration satellites, each weighing a little over 50 kilograms. SSIKLOPS will remain on the station for use for future small satellites.
If successful, SSIKLOPS will add to the growing range of capabilities for launching small satellites, and, along with existing secondary and proposed dedicated launch options, potentially reduce one of the biggest barriers to the greater use of smallsats: getting them into space.
source: http://www.thespacereview.com
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