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AeroAstro Awarded Phase II SBIR Contract for Further Development
of an Advanced Miniature Star Tracker
Ashburn,
VA – October 10, 2005
AeroAstro,
Inc., a leading provider of small satellites and related technology
products, today announced the award of a contract to continue
development of a Fast Angular Rate Miniature Star Tracker
(FAR-MST). This effort, funded through the Department of the
Air Force's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program,
builds on the results of an earlier development program awarded
to AeroAstro.
Under
the original contract, a Miniature Star Tracker (MST) is being
developed in conjunction with the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT) through an STTR award from the Missile
Defense Agency. The progress on the MST, which currently has
prototype star tracker hardware undergoing testing, formed
the foundation for the new FAR-MST SBIR contract awarded by
the Air Force Research Laboratory Space Vehicles Directorate
at Kirtland AFB, NM. The objective of both of these programs,
based upon technologies pioneered by AeroAstro, is to develop
an all-optical star tracker and angular rate sensor that is
very low in mass, volume, power consumption, and cost. Solely
through image processing of rapidly acquired pictures of star
fields, it simultaneously has the performance capabilities
that enable it to perform the essential navigation, rotation
sensing and attitude determination functions that formerly
demanded much larger, power hungry and more expensive components.
Star
trackers are indispensable for navigating in space, where
no landmarks, terrain features or GPS systems are available.
Celestial navigation is hardly new; it was used from the beginning
of recorded history to determine the position of travelers
on the desert and by mariners. Automatic star trackers were
used at least as early as the Automatic Astro Compass MD-1
used to guide B-52 bombers in the 1960s. AeroAstro's contribution
is in the development of the first very compact and affordable,
all-optical star tracker with autonomous lost-in-space recovery
and high-angular-rate tracking capability. This system can
recover from typical spacecraft tumble conditions and determine
the inertial three-axis attitude of the spacecraft without
first being provided an estimate. The fast angular tracking
also makes it feasible to eliminate ancillary components such
as gyroscopes. This provides savings in cost, power, complexity,
volume and mass.
Dr.
Thomas Vaneck, AeroAstro's Vice President, Business Development,
said, "FAR-MST is a perfect example of the company's
philosophy of providing affordable, high-quality products
to the microsatellite industry. Even though FAR-MST is still
in development, the number of customer requests we are receiving
is phenomenal. Clearly this is a product that is long overdue!"
Selected
FAR-MST's preliminary specifications include:
Sun/Moon/Earth
Exclusion Angle: 30° from boresight
Accuracy: Better than ±70 arcseconds,
3-axes (3σ)
CMOS Imager: ~1000 x 1000 pixel array, each
pixel 10μm square
Sensitivity: Better than 4th magnitude stars
Maximum Roll Rate about Boresight: 0.3°/sec
Update Rate: 1 Hz
Output: Quarternion
Stars Tracked: Up to 9 simultaneously
Star Catalog: 600 (more with increased memory
and processor power)
Image Rate: 0 to 24 fps
Power: Less than 3 Watts peak
Radiation Tolerance: Up to 20 krad, or more
with shielding
Dimensions: 2" x 2" x 3" (5.4
cm x 5.4 cm x 7.6 cm)
Mass: 2.2 lbm (1 kg)
Interface: RS-422, USB
About
AeroAstro
AeroAstro is a leader in innovative micro and nanospacecraft
applications – including science, remote sensing, and
communications – that open the space frontier to a larger
and more varied customer base. AeroAstro manufactures low-cost
satellite systems and components used in its own spacecraft
and for spacecraft development in the US and abroad. NASA,
the US Air Force, DARPA, commercial and academic customers
have all relied on AeroAstro spacecraft and components over
our 17-year history.
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