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Emily Lakdawalla

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by The Design


  ent ways of measuring timefer

  4:57:00

  5:00:46

  5:01:46

  5:02:37

  5:02:39

  5:10:46

  5:11:31

  5:11:49

  5:11:58

  5:12:06

  5:12:19

  5:12:49

  5:13:01

  5:14:28

  5:14:45

  5:14:59

  5:15:05

  5:15:14

  5:15:24

  5:15:43

  5:15:45

  s, when the spacecr

  ime (UTT

  ding to dif

  OS

  vated

  A

  yment

  ence point to Mar

  efer

  OS

  yment

  OS = acquisition of signal. LOS = loss of signal.

  y A

  A

  ace

  versal 1

  versal 2

  versal 3

  , descent, and landing accor

  Odysse

  ent

  ent Cruise Heat Rejection System

  ait for parachute deplo

  Ev

  V

  Cruise stage separation

  EDL guidance & control acti

  Cruise balance mass jettison

  Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

  Entry interf

  Guidance start

  Peak heating

  Bank re

  Peak deceleration

  Bank re

  Bank re

  Heading alignment

  Mars

  Entry balance mass jettison

  W

  Parachute deplo

  Last MEDLI measurement

  Heat shield separation

  Radar lock

  End direct-to-Earth transmission

  vents in entry

  Timeline of e

  ait for Guidance Start

  Table 2.2.

  time that the computer updated its navigational r

  interface time to be 540 seconds after that.

  Phase

  Approach

  Approach

  Approach

  Approach

  Approach

  W

  Range Control

  Range Control

  Range Control

  Range Control

  Range Control

  Range Control

  Heading alignment

  Heading alignment

  Straighten Up and Fly Right

  Straighten Up and Fly Right

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  2.3 EDL: Entry, Descent, and Landing 69

  S2016

  S2016

  S2016

  L2016

  K2014

  K2014

  K2014

  K2014

  S2014

  S2014

  S2014

  K2014

  S2016

  K2014

  K2014

  L2016

  L2016

  W2013

  W2013

  397502048.48

  397502068.35

  397502071.18

  397502074.00

  397502074.63

  397502090.92

  397502093.38

  397502127.89

  397502128.59

  397502132.89

  397502133.89

  397502136.86

  397502145.90

  397502146.52

  397502147.31

  397502189.07

  397502306.50

  397502502.00

  397502503.00

  333.482

  353.353

  356.178

  359

  359.63

  375.92

  378.38

  412.89

  413.59

  417.89

  418.89

  421.86

  430.9

  431.52

  432.31

  474.07

  591.50

  787

  788

  , personal communication, email dated February 17, 2016; Sc2014:

  873.482

  893.353

  896.178

  899

  899.63

  915.92

  918.38

  952.89

  953.59

  957.89

  958.89

  961.86

  970.9

  971.52

  972.31

  1014.068662

  1131.501662

  1327

  1328

  5:16:19

  5:16:39

  5:16:42

  5:16:45

  5:16:45

  5:17:01

  5:17:04

  5:17:38

  5:17:39

  5:17:43

  5:17:44

  5:17:47

  5:17:57

  5:17:57

  5:17:58

  5:18:40

  5:20:37

  5:23:53

  5:23:54

  ); L2016: calculated by me from MARDI image time stamps; MC2014: Mendeck and Craig

  2014

  ); S2016: Christian Schaller

  2014

  utty (

  ets

  al (

  wn

  aard and K

  y

  y LOS

  ).

  ); S2014: Sell et

  wn sensed

  2013

  er deplo

  ayw

  2016

  al (

  wered approach

  y crane start

  ver reaches end of bridle

  al (

  HiRISE image start

  HiRISE image heat shield

  HiRISE image lander

  Heat shield impact (approx.)

  Prime descent engine rock

  Backshell separation

  Po

  Sk

  Rock

  Ro

  Bogie release

  Ready for touchdo

  HiRISE image end

  Touchdo

  Flya

  First rear Hazcam image

  First front Hazcam image

  Mars Odysse

  Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter LOS

  ay et

  vak et

  W

  W2013: );

  ); N2016: No

  2014

  2014

  al (

  w (

  wered descent

  wered descent

  wered descent

  wered descent

  wered descent

  wered descent

  wered descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Parachute descent

  Po

  Po

  Po

  Po

  Po

  Po

  Po

  Landing

  Landing

  Landing

  Landing

  Landing

  Landing

  *Sources for the data in the table are: K2014: Karlg

  McGre

  Schratz et

  70 Getting to Mars

  Figure 2.7. Entry, descent, and landing trajectory. Base image is from Viking global mosaic, trajectories from JPL Horizons.

  2.3.1 Telecommunications during landing

  Ever since the loss of Mars Polar Lander, NASA has required Mars landers to be in con-

  stant communication with Earth during the dramatic and risky events of entry, descent, and

  landing. On the day of MSL’s landing, Mars and Earth were separated by about 248.2

  million kilometers, or 828.0 light-seconds. The entire entry, descent, and
landing took

  only 432 seconds from start to finish. There is nothing that anyone on Earth could do to

  rescue a mission should something go wrong; instead, any telemetry received would serve

  to help engineers determine the cause of a landing failure, with the goal of preventing a

  future one. MSL was required to transmit all highest-priority data within 3 seconds of the

  event it recorded. That way, some information could be salvaged from a catastrophic acci-

  dent to improve future missions.19

  Ideally, the spacecraft would use a single radio configuration for communications

  throughout entry, descent, and landing. But the MSL landing sequence had the spacecraft

  reconfiguring itself multiple times, throwing away hardware on which antennas were

  mounted. To handle communications, MSL had to switch among multiple radio systems

  and antennas.

  There were two primary X-band radio systems for communicating directly with Earth,

  one within the rover (still used now for surface operations) and one attached to the descent stage. During cruise, the descent stage X-band system handled communications through a

  19 The details of EDL telecommunications in this section are based on Schratz et al (2014)

  2.3 EDL: Entry, Descent, and Landing 71

  medium-gain antenna mounted to the cruise stage. During entry and descent, the descent

  stage communicated with Earth through two low-gain antennas mounted on the back-

  shell’s parachute cone, beginning with the parachute low-gain antenna and later switching

  to the tilted low-gain antenna (Figure 2.10). The signal from such small antennas, 112

  million kilometers from Earth, was weak, so they transmitted no telemetry. Rather, they

  broadcast 11-second-long “tones,” signals with frequencies slightly offset from the main

  carrier frequency, with different frequencies signifying different events. Events during the cruise, approach, and guided-entry phases were separated far enough in time that

  11- second-long signals were good enough to communicate the spacecraft’s status, but

  after that, MSL needed higher-rate communications. When events did overlap in time,

  complicated logic governed which tone would play first:

  If additional tone events occurred while one tone was playing, the new event was

  queued until the currently playing tone had completed. Then, the queued tone

  played. Each tone had a defined priority. Nominal tones were generally prioritized

  lower than tones indicating faults or specific critical events during EDL. Of the

  available tone events, a small subset were labeled as “stomping tones,” which inter-

  rupted a currently playing tone, causing the interrupted tone to be re-queued by

  flight software to replay when time permits. In the event of multiple queued tones,

  the highest priority tones were played first. In the event of tones with the same prior-

  ity, the most recent tones were played first, because the newest information during

  EDL was generally favored over stale information. Because of this software logic,

  the time between a tone event occurring and when it actually was radiated varied by

  several seconds, and some tones appeared to play out of order. Although this made

  real-time operations more complicated, it was the preferred strategy to enhance the

  probability of receiving indications of off-nominal behavior in the event of a fault…

  Parachute deploy and touchdown tones [were] carrier-only tone, where no subcar-

  rier modulation is used. 20

  For transmitting telemetry during descent and landing, MSL used the Electra-Lite UHF

  radio within the rover, broadcasting to receivers on Mars orbiters. It transmitted through

  three different low-gain UHF antennas at different times: one on the parachute cone of the

  backshell, one mounted to the top of the descent stage, and finally the rover’s helix antenna, the one that it still uses for surface operations (see section 4.5). Amazingly, during entry, descent, and landing, the Parkes radio telescope back on Earth, in Australia, was able to

  pick up the signal from MSL’s UHF antennas. While the signal was too weak for Parkes to

  decode any telemetry, it did provide Doppler information as the spacecraft decelerated

  toward landing.

  Telemetry arrived on Earth with the assistance of orbital relays. Odyssey provided the

  primary conduit for real-time communication. It served as a bent-pipe relay: it received

  MSL’s signals, demodulated them, and immediately sent the decoded telemetry to Earth.

  The Odyssey relay arrived only seconds slower than the direct-to-Earth tones. Mars

  Reconnaissance Orbiter recorded MSL’s UHF signals in an “open-loop” mode, without

  demodulating them. This recording wasn’t available on Earth until hours after landing, but

  20 Schratz et al (2014)

  72 Getting to Mars

  would have provided more data if an anomaly happened that caused Odyssey to lose lock

  on the signal. The European Space Agency’s Mars Express also listened for MSL’s signal.

  It operated in an open-loop carrier-only detection mode, which didn’t record telemetry but

  provided an alternate angle for Doppler tracking relative to that recorded from Earth.

  2.3.2 The aeroshell and MEDLI

  MSL’s was the most challenging Mars atmospheric entry in history, for two main reasons.

  MSL was dramatically larger than any previous landed Mars spacecraft, and its goal was

  a much more precise landing than previously attempted (Figure 2.8). The aeroshell was 4.5 meters in diameter, the heat shield a 70° cone (Figure 2.9). The heat shield’s shape was the same as for all previous Mars landers, but Curiosity’s aeroshell was a meter larger and more than three times heavier than any previous one. 21 In a throwback to Viking, the aeroshell was able to generate lift. Parts of the backshell and heat shield are labeled in

  Figure 2.10 and Figure 2.11. The backshell with parachute and balance masses weighed 576.6 kilograms. 22 The heat shield weighed 440.7 kilograms.

  Figure 2.8. Comparison of NASA Mars aeroshells. Emily Lakdawalla after Edquist et al (2009) and Wallace (2012 ).

  21 Edquist K et al (2009)

  22 Allen Chen, personal communication, email dated July 1, 2016, correcting numbers published before the launch

  2.3 EDL: Entry, Descent, and Landing 73

  Figure 2.9. Top: Aeroshell dimensions. The aeroshell consists of the backshell and heat shield. Bottom: geometry of the aeroshell during guided flight. Images: NASA/JPL-Caltech.

  Top diagram based on Karlgaard et al ( 2014 ). Bottom based on Steltzner et al (2010 ).

  The heat shield gathered an unprecedented amount of information about the descent

  through the Martian atmosphere, thanks to the MSL Entry, Descent, and Landing

  Instrumentation (MEDLI) sensors embedded within it. MEDLI had two kinds of sensors.

  74 Getting to Mars

  Figure 2.10. Parts of the MSL backshell. NASA/KSC image releases KSC-2011-4526 and KSC-2011-7183, annotated by Emily Lakdawalla.

  Seven transducers of the Mars Entry Atmospheric Data System (MEADS) measured

  atmospheric pressure by tiny 2.5-millimeter through-holes in the shield. Seven MEDLI

  Integrated Sensor Plugs (MISP) were embedded in the heatshield within 33-millimeter-

  diameter plugs. They consisted of thermocouples to measure temperature and recession

  sensors to document how the PICA material weathered entry. Locations of the MEDLI

  sensors are shown in Figure 2.11 and Figure 2.12. 23

  23 Little et al (2013)

  2.3 EDL: Entry, Descent, and Landing 75 />
  Figure 2.11. Parts of the MSL heat shield. Top: exterior surface of the heat shield, with locations of the MEDLI Integrated Sensor Plugs marked. Bottom: interior surface of the heat shield. NASA/JPL-Caltech/Lockheed Martin image release PIA14128, taken at Lockheed

  Martin Space Systems, Denver, in April 2011, annotated by Emily Lakdawalla.

  76 Getting to Mars

  Figure 2.12. Locations of the MEDLI MEADS (orange) and MISP (white) sensors on the MSL heat shield. Flow lines show the direction of expected air flow. Based on Little et al (2013 ) and Bec k et al ( 2010 ).

  2.3.3 Final approach

  Ten minutes before entry, at 5:00:46 Spacecraft Event Time on August 6, 2012, the cruise

  stage separated, its work complete. Later images from Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

  HiRISE and CTX instruments show numerous impact craters from the cruise stage scat-

  tered over a strewnfield 12 kilometers long, indicating that the cruise stage – unprotected by an aeroshell – broke up in the atmosphere (Figure 2.13).24 The cruise stage took with it MSL’s star trackers. From that point on, the rover computer would maintain its sense of its own orientation by dead reckoning. MEDLI began to acquire data from the heat shield.

  24 McEwen A (2012)

  2.3 EDL: Entry, Descent, and Landing 77

  Figure 2.13. Impact sites of the cruise balance masses and fragments of the cruise stage. At about 4 meters in diameter, the two largest craters are probably the cruise balance mass impact sites. All the other, smaller impacts are likely from fragments of the cruise stage.

  HiRISE images ESP_029245_1755 and ESP_029601_1755. NASA/JPL-Caltech/UA.

  78 Getting to Mars

  Nine minutes prior to entry, the guidance, navigation, and control system activated, and

  the rover computer fed it the navigators’ best estimate of the spacecraft’s position and

  velocity. (Many publications about the landing refer to this moment, 540 seconds before

  entry, or 397501174.997338 seconds on the spacecraft clock, as “t0” for the landing phase, while others use the moment of entry as the zero point.) The spacecraft stilled its rotation and oriented to the correct angle for hitting the top of the atmosphere. It ejected two 75-kilogram blocks of tungsten, the cruise balance masses, which went on to impact the surface

  close to the cruise stage (Figure 2.13). The sudden loss of 150 kilograms of mass offset the capsule’s center of mass away from its centerline. Once the capsule was in the atmosphere,

  this offset gave it a 16° angle of attack. The capsule was ready to fly in the Martian air.

  MSL switched X-band antennas, now broadcasting tones from the tilted low-gain

  antenna, which was pointed 17.5° away from the aeroshell’s axis of symmetry (Figure 2.10).

  The switch of antennas caused only a very brief loss of communication with the

  spacecraft.

  As MSL approached Mars, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter approached the equator from

 

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