Status Report

ESA Venus Express Status: No. 17 – Successful Trajectory Correction Manoeuvre

By SpaceRef Editor
March 16, 2006
Filed under , , ,
ESA Venus Express Status: No. 17 – Successful Trajectory Correction Manoeuvre
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Original report

06 Mar 2006 10:21

Report for Period 24 February to 02 March 2006

On 24 February a Trajectory Correction Manoeuvre was executed in order to trim the spacecraft trajectory after the Main Engine calibration manoeuvre. The manoeuvre executed flawlessly but the current knowledge of the orbit indicates that it is very likely that another fine tuning will be required once the orbital knowledge has increased.

MAG and ASPERA science acquisitions continue as planned.

As from this week the spacecraft will be closer to the Sun than when at Venus, therefore, it is already facing the maximum solar constant it will have to face during its mission.

The table below shows a chronology of the main activities in the reporting period:









































MET (Day)


Date


DOY


Main Activity


108


24/02/06


055

TCM

109


25/02/06


056

SC Monitoring

110


26/02/06


057


SC Monitoring and Bit Rate test


111


27/02/06


058

SC Monitoring

112


28/02/06


059


VMC SW Upload and Test


113


01/03/06


060

SC Monitoring

114


02/03/06


061


SC Monitoring

At the end of the last Cebreros pass in the reporting period (DOY 061, 13:00) Venus Express was 63.2 million km from the Earth, 107.8 million km from the Sun, and 14.3 million km from Venus. The one-way signal travel time was 211 seconds.

Spacecraft Status

AOCS

On DoY 055 a TCM was executed without problems and the estimated delta-V (0.13704m/s) was very close to the commanded one (0.134718 m/s).

The knowledge of the spacecraft trajectory improved significantly after the execution of the TCM, due to ranging measurements, and calculations suggest an additional TCM at around VOI – 13 days is needed to clean-up all the deviations introduced by WOL operations, limitations of Sun pressure model, and eventual out gassing.

Payload Activities

ASPERA

The instrument is off. A science acquisition has been performed on DoY 057.

MAG

The instrument is on producing science.

PFS

The instrument is off.

SPICAV

The instrument is off.

VeRA

The USO is kept powered but muted.

VIRTIS

The instrument is off.

VMC

The instrument has been activated on DoY 059 for a full SW upload. This operation, originally planned over two days, was successfully concluded within one ground station pass. All VMC operating modes (Monitoring, Limb, Pericenter, and Transmission) have been tested. Test science data generated during the test have been downlinked on DoY 060.

Future Milestones

With the next reporting period all preparation activities will be concluded such that the rest of the cruise phase will be dedicated to the navigation task in order to achieve the most accurate orbit insertion.

Between DoY 061 and 063 the -X face of the spacecraft will be exposed to the Sun with an angle of 5 deg in order to characterise and possibly get rid of the outgassing effects seen in January during the thermal characterisation. This activity is required since this is the attitude the spacecraft will have in the last 10 days before arrival at Venus.

On DOY064 the last science operations with MAG and ASPERA will be performed.

On DOY 065 a test with the DSN station in Madrid will take place in order to rehearse the operations that will be done with the same station during the orbit insertion burn. This test will include acquisition of 2-ways and 1-way S-band signal with the simulation of an occultation inbetween. The spacecraft attitude will also be such that the orientation of the LGA-1 with respect to the Earth will be the same as the one for the orbit insertion.

SpaceRef staff editor.