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- From: baalke@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov (Ron Baalke)
- Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro,alt.sci.planetary
- Subject: Galileo Laser Test Successful
- Date: 23 Jan 1993 06:33 UT
- Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- Lines: 128
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <23JAN199306333725@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov
- Keywords: Galileo, JPL
- News-Software: VAX/VMS VNEWS 1.41
-
- From the "JPL Universe"
- December 30, 1992
-
- GOPEX reaches Galileo via laser beam
- By Mark Whalen
-
- JPL researchers took advantage of Galileo's recent pass by
- Earth to achieve a major milestone in space communications, by
- successfully transmitting laser beams fired from the ground to
- the spacecraft at distances of up to 6 million kilometers (3.7
- million miles).
- "This experiment is part of a program to show that future
- deep space missions can use laser beams to send back to Earth
- larger volumes of space-acquired data than is currently possible
- using radio signals," said Dr. James Lesh, supervisor of the
- Optical Communications Group and principal investigator for the
- Galileo Optical Experiment (GOPEX).
- The experiment's objectives, said Lesh, were to show that an
- uplink beacon laser -- required as a reference for pointing a
- return beam back to Earth -- could be successfully pointed to a
- distant spacecraft based only on the navigational predicts of the
- spacecraft trajectory. To do this, the distortions produced by
- Earth's atmosphere had to be predicted and accommodated.
- The GOPEX demonstration began on Dec. 9 (one day after
- Galileo made its closest Earth approach on its way to Jupiter) at
- 600,000 kilometers (370,000 miles), and continued through Dec.
- 16. Laser beams were simultaneously transmitted to the spacecraft
- from a 61-centimeter (24-inch-diameter) telescope at the Table
- Mountain Observatory near Wrightwood, Calif. and from a 1.5-meter
- (60-inch) telescope at the U.S. Air Force Phillips Laboratory's
- Starfire Optical Range near Albuquerque, N.M.
- The transmissions, which were detected by Galileo's onboard
- camera, established a record for the farthest known transmission
- and reception of a laser beam, a final distance of 6 million
- kilometers.
- "GOPEX was extremely successful," said Lesh. "A real
- pleasant surprise in the experiment was that we conducted the
- experiment so repeatedly. Each day we made transmissions, we had
- extremely reliable detections on the spacecraft camera.
- "We would predict ahead of time, `on this frame, we're going
- to see a series of pulses about so high on the picture,' and as
- soon as we got the image back, sure enough, there they were," he
- said.
- Spacecraft signals produced by current radio-frequency
- systems are used for three purposes, according to Lesh --
- communications, navigation and science investigations. "There are
- completely analogous applications in the laser area," he said.
- "We can communicate at substantially higher rates while
- occupying much less room on the spacecraft," said Lesh. "The
- antenna is the main feature on the spacecraft with radio
- frequencies, often reaching diameters in excess of four meters.
- At laser frequencies, 10-50 centimeter telescopes are quite
- adequate.
- "We can also use optical beams for navigation," Lesh
- continued. "When viewed from Earth, the light beam from a
- spacecraft will look like a blinking star. We can view it in the
- context of the stellar grid, or relative to target bodies we are
- approaching. That information can be used to derive angular
- coordinates of the spacecraft.
- "Laser signals also can be used to determine the
- spacecraft's range, which, together with the angle information,
- can be used to locate the spacecraft," said Lesh.
- As far as science investigations are concerned, Lesh claims
- that scientists could use optical signals to probe phenomena such
- as planetary atmospheres, to measure scattering from the
- interplanetary dust particle distribution, or to make spatially
- selective measurements of planetary ring systems using very short
- wavelengths (below one micron).
- "Also," Lesh added, "optical signals are not corrupted by
- solar wind fluctuations, like radio frequencies are. Some past
- investigations of gravitational bending of radio waves have been
- limited by charged particle fluctuations in the solar wind."
- Lesh also said laser communications technology will yield a
- data rate increase "of about one-to-two orders of magnitude" over
- radio frequencies.
- The idea of testing a laser uplink is not a new one. Lesh
- said that the GOPEX demonstration was originally proposed in June
- 1984, but was rejected at the time because there were no plans
- for Galileo to view Earth on its way to Jupiter.
- But the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger accident prompted
- changes in Galileo's launch system and necessitated a new flight
- path, which included two gravity-assisted flybys of Earth. "At
- the same time," he said, "Earth viewing became part of Galileo's
- priorities, and the climate became much more receptive to our
- doing the experiment, subject to us demonstrating beyond any
- doubt that we would not damage any instrument on board the
- spacecraft."
- In that regard, preperations were made to conduct GOPEX
- during the Earth-1 encounter in December 1990. But inconclusive
- data turned up on a test to determine if the experiment might
- harm the Galileo orbiter's Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer, so
- "about three days before the experiment, we were waved off," said
- Lesh. In the intervening two years, testing of the effects of
- laser signals on the NIMS and Solid State Imaging Camera
- detectors concluded that "we were safe to substantially higher
- levels than we would ever produce at the spacecraft," said Lesh.
- What's next for the program? Lesh said proposed plans call
- for a flight experimental terminal to be flown aboard a space
- shuttle in the latter half of the 1990s. "We are developing the
- base technology for this now," he said, "and are trying to
- augment the base program with some new flight experiment monies
- that will allow us to do the (shuttle) demonstration."
- Operational use of this technology is anticipated some time
- after the year 2000, Lesh added.
- "We expect that the first deep space mission to fly optical
- will fly it as a mission enhancement experiment," said Lesh,
- "although this could change with the new emphasis on low-cost
- microspacecraft.
- "I believe that there are missions that can be best served
- by laser frequencies, and there are those that are best served by
- radio frequencies," he said. "Laser beams do require a certain
- amount of pointing, for example. If you have large uncertainty
- about the spacecraft pointing direction, it may be better to use
- radio waves. However, most missions currently flying or on the
- drawing boards provide adequate attitude control to use laser
- communications.
- "Nevertheless," said Lesh, "I don't see us de-implementing
- any capabilities in the future; I see us providing an additional
- capability that will allow future missions to plan for and make
- best use of the available technologies."
- ###
- ___ _____ ___
- /_ /| /____/ \ /_ /| Ron Baalke | baalke@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov
- | | | | __ \ /| | | | Jet Propulsion Lab |
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