The Deep Space Radiation Probe: Development of a first lunar science payload for space environment studies and capacity building

Loren C. Chang, Wei Yi Lin, Yi Hsuan Chou, Jen Siang Lin, Chieh Lung, I. Chen, Kai Jie Hou, Glenn Franco Gacal, Yi Chung Chiu, Yushun Wang, Hui Hui Chou, Chi Kuang Chao, Jann-Yeng Liu, Tung Yuan Hsiao, I. Chun Cho, Takumi Date, Masayuki Urata, Masahiro Taeda, Kenichiro Tanaka, Nikola VasovicNiall Keegan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Regions outside of Low Earth Orbit (LEO, altitudes above approximately 1000 km) are classified as “deep space”, including Medium Earth Orbit (MEO), geostationary orbit (GEO), as well as cislunar and lunar space. The deep space environment poses many challenges for human and robotic exploration, including stronger ionizing radiation fluxes, more extreme temperature variations, as well as limited data downlink volume. With the growth of the rideshare and hosted payload model aboard government and commercial lunar missions, developing the capacity to design and implement payloads and other space avionics for this environment is of increased importance this decade. Utilizing one of the growing number of rideshare opportunities offered by commercial lunar mission providers, National Central University (NCU) has been working on the rapid development of Taiwan's first scientific payload for lunar lander use, with launch aboard the HAKUTO-R Mission 2 (M2) lander from ispace, inc. scheduled not earlier than Q4 2024. This Deep Space Radiation Probe (DSRP) will provide measurements of radiation dose, dose rate, and single event upset (SEU) rate during the Earth-Moon transit, in lunar orbit, as well as on the lunar surface. DSRP utilizes elements of the on-board computer (OBC) developed and flight qualified aboard the NCU-developed IDEASSat 3U CubeSat mission in 2021, and was developed by a student team, in consultation with experienced engineers from the lunar lander team. In this paper, we will report on the objectives, concept of operation, design, and implementation of the DSRP project. We will also describe the steps taken to facilitate parallel development of the DSRP payload and the HAKUTO-R M2 lander, as well as lessons learned during the design, implementation, and qualification process. The radiation data provided by DSRP will be beneficial for the development of future deep space spacecraft avionics, as well as crewed missions, and will also serve to build the capacity for deep space spacecraft and payload development at NCU.

Original languageEnglish
JournalAdvances in Space Research
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2024

Keywords

  • Deep space
  • Ionizing radiation
  • Lunar lander
  • Lunar payload
  • Single event effects

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