Science

ISRO To Launch ESA's Proba-3 Satellites Next Week: Why This Sun Corona Observation Mission Is Groundbreaking

Kuldeep NegiNov 30, 2024, 03:53 PM | Updated 03:54 PM IST
Two Proba-3 satellites atop atop their upper stage

Two Proba-3 satellites atop atop their upper stage


The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is set to launch the European Space Agency's Proba-3 satellites in the first week of December.

The satellites have been integrated into the payload fairing of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle, India Today reported.

The Indian space agency is using the XL version of its workhorse PSLV rocket to launch the satellites.

The satellites will be launched onboard PSLV-XL from ISRO's Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on 4 December.

ESA's Proba Missions

The Proba (PRoject for OnBoard Autonomy) missions are a series of in-orbit demonstration (IOD) missions from the European Space Agency, for demonstrating and validating new technologies and concepts in orbit.

Developed under the General Support Technology Programme (GSTP) of ESA, the Proba missions are based on small satellites, embarking payload and instruments to deliver actual data to users to demonstrate a new capability.

ESA has launched three Proba missions so far — Proba-1 in 2001, Proba-2 in 2009, and Proba-V in 2012.

The Proba-3 Mission

The Proba-3 mission is devoted to the demonstration of technologies and techniques for highly-precise satellite formation flying.

It consists of two small satellites launched together that will separate apart to fly in tandem, to prepare for future multi-satellite missions flying as one virtual structure.

Proba-3 marks the next step in formation flying. As a world first, its two satellites – the Coronagraph spacecraft and the Occulter spacecraft – will maintain formation to a few millimetres and arc second precision at distances of around 150 metres for six hours at a time. 

The two satellites will create the conditions for observation of the Sun corona, synthesising the equivalent of an extremely large instrument.

Maintaining the correct position in the shadow requires a precise formation flying capability, down to a single millimetre of precision.  

Each Proba-3 satellite is powered through high efficiency solar panels.

When in position the two satellites will be precisely aligned so that the Occulter spacecraft casts a shadow across the Coronagraph space craft.

The satellite called the Occulter Spacecraph (or OSC) features a 1.4-m-diameter occulting disk, which will be kept perpendicular to the direction of the Sun’s light.

This disk will cast a shadow, of about 8 cm width at around 150 m.

The satellite called the Coronagraph (or CSC) hosts a scientific telescope with a 5 cm aperture.

The goal is to maintain, owing to formation flying, the “Coronagraph” aperture within the 8 cm shadow with millimetre accuracy.

This will happen when the two satellites are close to the apogee along their highly elliptical orbit (more than 60 000 km altitude), where Earth's force of gravity is weaker and formation maintenance requires less propellant.   

Proba-3 will be able to study the corona for six hours in every 19hr 36min orbit, a factor of a hundred improvement in uninterrupted study time.    

Why the PSLV-XL was chosen for the Proba-3 Mission

The ESA selected India's PSLV-XL launcher since the lift required to place the combined Proba-3 satellites (550 kg) on their desired highly elliptical orbit is above the capability of ESA's Vega-C launcher, while Ariane-6 would be too costly for a tightly-budgeted technology demonstration mission.   

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