Analysis of System Margins on Deep Space Missions Utilizing Solar Electric Propulsion

2008 
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory has conducted a study focused on the analysis of appropriate margins for deep space missions using solar electric propulsion (SEP). The purpose of this study is to understand the links between disparate system margins (power, mass, duty cycle, etc.) and their impact on overall mission performance and robustness. It is shown that the various sources of uncertainty and technical risk associated with electric propulsion mission design can be summarized into three relatively independent parameters 1) Electric Propulsion Power Margin, 2) Propellant Margin and 3) Duty Cycle Margin. The overall relationship between these parameters and other major sources of uncertainty is presented. A detailed trajectory analysis is conducted to examine the impact that various assumptions related to power, duty cycle, destination, and thruster performance including missed thrust periods have on overall performance. Recommendations are presented for system margins for deep space missions utilizing solar electric propulsion.
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