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The Ion Propulsion System for the Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission
Author(s) -
Daniel A. Herman,
Walter Santiago,
Hani Kamhawi,
James E. Polk,
John Snyder,
Richard R. Hofer,
Michael J. Sekerak
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
52nd aiaa/sae/asee joint propulsion conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2016-4824
Subject(s) - ion thruster , propulsion , in space propulsion technologies , rendezvous , aerospace engineering , electrically powered spacecraft propulsion , spacecraft , aeronautics , human spaceflight , space exploration , engineering , systems engineering , astrobiology , physics
The Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission is a Solar Electric Propulsion Technology Demonstration Mission (ARRM) whose main objectives are to develop and demonstrate a high-power solar electric propulsion capability for the Agency and return an asteroidal mass for rendezvous and characterization in a companion human-crewed mission. This high-power solar electric propulsion capability, or an extensible derivative of it, has been identified as a critical part of NASA'a future beyond-low-Earth-orbit, human-crewed exploration plans. Under the NASA Space Technology Mission Directorate the critical electric propulsion and solar array technologies are being developed. This paper presents the conceptual design of the ARRM ion propulsion system, the status of the NASA in-house thruster and power processing development activities, the status of the planned technology maturation for the mission through flight hardware delivery, and the status of the mission formulation and spacecraft acquisition.

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