Session

Session VIII: Advanced Concepts II

Location

Utah State University, Logan, UT

Abstract

Growing commercial and governmental interest in lunar and asteroid resource extraction, as well as continuing interest in deep space scientific missions, means an increase in demand for deep space communications systems. Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s MarCo demonstrated the viability and usefulness of cubesats as relay stations for deep space communications. Given their relatively low cost of construction and launch, cubesats can decrease the cost of building deep space communication systems. This has the potential to make it feasible for a group without a large budget, such as a university cubesat team, to build such a system. However, while minimizing the cost of the satellite is important, it is only one part of the communications link. The ground station is the other. The cost of accessing the Deep Space Network puts it out of reach for most operations that are not NASA programs, including our student-designed and built University of Colorado Earth Escape Explorer (CU-E3) 6U cubesat. This means that a project such as ours has to look at options provided by commercial ground station services.

As a competitor in the NASA Cubequest Challenge Deep Space Derby, the CU-E3 team’s goal is to demonstrate it is possible to build a deep space communications system that is small, powerful, and (relatively) low cost. This means not just the hardware on the satellite but also the ground station. On the satellite side, we have developed custom hardware to interface with an AstroDev Li-2 radio for C-band uplink. For downlink, we will be using an X-band radio developed for low earth applications at the University of Colorado Boulder under the NASA Small Satellite Technology Development program. For ground station services, we will be partnering with a commercial provider, ATLAS.

This paper describes the architecture of the CU-E3 communications system, the challenges of developing a communications system small enough to fit in a 6U cubesat yet powerful enough for deep space, and the process we used to research and partner with a commercial ground station service to help us fulfill our mission.

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Aug 4th, 4:30 PM

Closing the Deep Space Communications Link with Commercial Assets

Utah State University, Logan, UT

Growing commercial and governmental interest in lunar and asteroid resource extraction, as well as continuing interest in deep space scientific missions, means an increase in demand for deep space communications systems. Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s MarCo demonstrated the viability and usefulness of cubesats as relay stations for deep space communications. Given their relatively low cost of construction and launch, cubesats can decrease the cost of building deep space communication systems. This has the potential to make it feasible for a group without a large budget, such as a university cubesat team, to build such a system. However, while minimizing the cost of the satellite is important, it is only one part of the communications link. The ground station is the other. The cost of accessing the Deep Space Network puts it out of reach for most operations that are not NASA programs, including our student-designed and built University of Colorado Earth Escape Explorer (CU-E3) 6U cubesat. This means that a project such as ours has to look at options provided by commercial ground station services.

As a competitor in the NASA Cubequest Challenge Deep Space Derby, the CU-E3 team’s goal is to demonstrate it is possible to build a deep space communications system that is small, powerful, and (relatively) low cost. This means not just the hardware on the satellite but also the ground station. On the satellite side, we have developed custom hardware to interface with an AstroDev Li-2 radio for C-band uplink. For downlink, we will be using an X-band radio developed for low earth applications at the University of Colorado Boulder under the NASA Small Satellite Technology Development program. For ground station services, we will be partnering with a commercial provider, ATLAS.

This paper describes the architecture of the CU-E3 communications system, the challenges of developing a communications system small enough to fit in a 6U cubesat yet powerful enough for deep space, and the process we used to research and partner with a commercial ground station service to help us fulfill our mission.