As NASA looks to explore deeper into our solar system, one of the key areas of interest is studying worlds that can help researchers better understand our solar system and the universe around us. One of the next destinations in this knowledge-gathering campaign is a rare world located in the asteroid belt called Psyche.
Psyche is different than millions of other asteroids because it appears to have an exposed nickel-iron surface. Researchers at Arizona State University, in partnership with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), believe the asteroid could actually be the leftover core of an early planet. And, since we can’t directly explore any planet’s core, including our own, Psyche offers a rare look into the violent history of our solar system.
“Psyche is a unique body because it is, by far, the largest metal asteroid out there; it’s about the size of Massachusetts,” said David Oh, the mission’s lead project systems engineer at JPL. “By exploring Psyche, we’ll learn about the formation of the planets, how planetary cores are formed and, just as important, we’ll be exploring a new type of world. We’ve looked at worlds made of rock, ice and of gas, but we’ve never had an opportunity to look at a metal world, so this is brand new exploration in the classic style of NASA.”
But getting to Psyche won’t be easy. It requires a cutting-edge propulsion system with exceptional performance, which is also safe, reliable and cost-effective. That’s why the mission team has turned to NASA Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, which has been advancing solar electric propulsion (SEP) for decades.
SEP thrusters use inert gases, like xenon, which are then energized by the electric power generated from on-board solar arrays to provide gentle, non-stop thrust.
“For deep space missions, the type and amount of fuel required to propel a spacecraft is an important factor for mission planners,” said Carol Tolbert, project manager for Psyche thruster testing at NASA Glenn. “An SEP system, like the one used for this mission, operates more efficiently than a conventional chemical propulsion system, which would be impractical for this type of mission.”
The reduced fuel mass allows the mission to enter orbit around Psyche and provides additional space for all of the mission’s scientific payload. Psyche’s payload includes a multispectral imager, magnetometer and gamma-ray spectrometer. These instruments will help the science team better understand the asteroid’s origin, composition and history.
An additional benefit of SEP is flexibility and robustness in the flight plan, which allow the spacecraft to arrive at Psyche much faster and more efficiently than it could using conventional propulsion.
For this mission, the spacecraft, which will be built jointly by JPL and Space Systems Loral (SSL), will use the SPT-140 Hall effect thruster. Because Psyche is three times farther away from the sun than Earth, flying there required a unique test of the low-power operation of the thruster in the very low pressures that will be encountered in space.
The mission team, including Jason Frieman from Glenn, Giovanni Lenguito from SSL and Steve Snyder from JPL, called upon NASA Glenn, and its space power and propulsion expertise, to put the mission’s thruster through its paces at the center’s Electric Propulsion Laboratory.
“This mission will be the first to use a Hall effect thruster system beyond lunar orbit, so the tests here at Glenn, which had never been conducted before, were needed to ensure the thruster could perform and operate as expected in the deep space environment,” said Tolbert.
The facility at NASA Glenn has been a premier destination for electric propulsion and power system testing for over 40 years and features a number of space environment chambers, which simulate the vacuum and temperatures of space.
“This was very important to the mission because we wanted to test-like-we-fly and fly-like-we-test,” said Oh. “Glenn has a world-class facility that allowed us to go to very low pressures to simulate the environment the spacecraft will operate in and better understand how our thrusters will perform around Psyche.
“At first glance, the results confirm our predictions regarding how the thruster will perform, and it looks like everything is working as expected. But, we will continue to refine our models by doing more analysis.”
As the team works toward an anticipated August 2022 launch, they will use the data collected at NASA Glenn to update thruster modeling and incorporate it into mission trajectories.
The Psyche Mission is being completed under NASA’s Science Mission Directorate’s Discovery Program, a series of lower-cost, highly focused robotic space missions that are exploring the solar system.
Jimi Russell
NASA Glenn Research Center