NASA begins new deployable solar array tech demo on Pathfinder spacecraft

NASA Begins New Deployable Solar Array Tech Demo on Pathfinder Spacecraft - NASA
A test image of Earth taken by NASA’s Pathfinder Technology Demonstrator-4’s onboard camera. The camera will capture images of the Lightweight Integrated Solar Array and anTenna upon deployment. Credit: NASA

NASA recently evaluated initial flight data and imagery from Pathfinder Technology Demonstrator-4 (PTD-4), confirming proper checkout of the spacecraft's systems including its on-board electronics as well as the payload's support systems such as the small onboard camera. Shown above is a test image of Earth taken by the payload camera, shortly after PTD-4 reached orbit. This camera will continue photographing the technology demonstration during the mission.

Payload operations are now underway for the primary objective of the PTD-4 mission—the demonstration of a new power and for future spacecraft. The payload, a deployable solar array with an integrated antenna called the Lightweight Integrated Solar Array and anTenna, or LISA-T, has initiated deployment of its central boom structure. The boom supports four and communication arrays, also called petals. Releasing the central boom pushes the still-stowed petals nearly three feet (one meter) away from the spacecraft bus.

The mission team is currently working through an initial challenge to get LISA-T's central boom to fully extend before unfolding the petals and beginning its and communication operations.

Small spacecraft on deep space missions require more electrical power than what is currently offered by existing technology. The four-petal solar array of LISA-T is a thin-film solar array that offers lower mass, lower stowed volume, and three times more power per mass and volume allocation than current solar arrays. The in-orbit includes deployment, operation, and environmental survivability of the thin-film solar array.

NASA teams are testing a key technology demonstration known as LISA-T, short for the Lightweight Integrated Solar Array and anTenna. It’s a super compact, stowable, thin-film solar array that when fully deployed in space, offers both a power generation and communication capability for small spacecraft. LISA-T’s orbital flight test is part of the Pathfinder Technology Demonstrator series of missions. To travel farther into deep space, small spacecraft require more electrical power than what is currently available through existing technology. LISA-T aims to answer that demand and would offer small spacecraft access to power without compromising mass or volume. Credit: NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center

"The LISA-T experiment is an opportunity for NASA and the small spacecraft community to advance the packaging, deployment, and operation of thin-film, fully flexible solar and antenna arrays in space. The thin-film arrays will vastly improve power generation and communication capabilities throughout many different mission applications," said Dr. John Carr, deputy center chief technologist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. "These capabilities are critical for achieving higher value science alongside the exploration of deep space with small spacecraft."

The Pathfinder Technology Demonstration series of missions leverages a commercial platform that serves to test innovative technologies to increase the capability of small spacecraft. Deploying LISA-T's thin solar array in the harsh environment of space presents inherent challenges, such as deploying large highly flexible non-metallic structures with high area to mass ratios. Performing experiments such as LISA-T on a smaller, lower-cost allows NASA the opportunity to take manageable risk with a high probability of a great return.

The LISA-T experiment aims to enable future with the ability to acquire and communicate data through improved power generation and communication capabilities on the same integrated array.

Provided by NASA

Citation: NASA begins new deployable solar array tech demo on Pathfinder spacecraft (2024, October 23) retrieved 4 August 2025 from https://phys.org/news/2024-10-nasa-deployable-solar-array-tech.html
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