Astroscale’s ELSA-d Finalizes
De-Orbit Operations Marking Successful Mission
Conclusion
Jan. 24, 2024
Astroscale Holdings Inc. has
completed the final phase of its End-of-Life Services by
Astroscale (ELSA-d) mission with the safe and controlled
de-orbit operations of the ELSA-d servicer satellite
using the remaining operational thrusters, marking the
successful conclusion of the pioneering mission. The
servicer is orbiting at an altitude of approximately
500km and will re-enter and burn-up in approximately 3.5
years — well within the commonly adopted 25-year
guidelines. The client satellite, which does not have
the ability to maneuver, will naturally de-orbit over
the next 10 years.
ELSA-d was the world’s first
commercial mission to prove the core technologies
necessary for on-orbit satellite servicing in low Earth
orbit (LEO). The mission, which consisted of two
satellites — a servicer designed to safely remove debris
from orbit and a client that serves as a piece of
replica debris — was launched as a stack from the
Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan in March 2021.
The mission successfully completed
unprecedented demonstrations in orbit, including
repeated magnetic capture and rendezvous operations. In
the first demonstration, the servicer released the
client and manually performed magnetic docking,
successfully validating the capture system, on-board
sensors and cameras. During the Autonomous Capture
demonstration, the servicer released the client and
began autonomous relative navigation holding a “home
position” for over seven hours. However, anomalous
spacecraft conditions were detected and for the safety
of the mission, the team decided not to proceed with the
capture attempt.
Despite the servicer losing the use
of four out of its eight thrusters, the mission went on
to complete further controlled close-approach rendezvous
operations between its two spacecraft in orbit. The
technologies proven in this demonstration included
tracking of an object from a great distance, rendezvous
with an uncontrolled object, and handover from absolute
navigation to relative navigation for a LEO servicing
spacecraft. These capabilities are essential for
rendezvous and proximity operations and on-orbit
servicing, and this demonstration was unprecedented for
a commercially funded mission in LEO.
The ELSA-d mission proved other key
capabilities required for on-orbit servicing, including:
autonomous guidance, navigation and
control algorithms, closed loop control with on-board
navigation sensors, autonomous thruster rendezvous
maneuvering and attitude control, navigation of a
servicer spacecraft from approximately 1,600 km to
within 160 m of a client using absolute navigation
techniques (GPS and ground-based observations),
transition from absolute navigation to relative
navigation using on-board LPR sensor, and more than two
years of servicer and client satellite in-orbit mission
operations.
ELSA-d received numerous awards and
accolades for breaking new ground for space
sustainability and on-orbit servicing, including the
International Astronautical Federation’s Excellence in
Industry Awards 2023, Via Satellite 2021 Satellite
Technology of the Year, and the Minister of State for
Space Policy Award, sponsored by the Cabinet Office,
Government of Japan.
“Despite the setbacks once in
orbit, ELSA-d demonstrated multiple dynamically complex
capture capabilities and rendezvous and proximity
operations necessary for any future satellite servicing
mission,” said Gene Fujii, Chief Engineer of Astroscale.
“I congratulate the entire Astroscale team, our
partners, and supporters for the successful conclusion
of this mission. Now we turn our attention to our next
launch, where ADRAS-J will showcase our technologies to
approach and characterize an existing piece of large
debris in orbit.”
Astroscale has harnessed what it
learned from ELSA-d and evolved future missions,
including the upcoming Active Debris Removal by
Astroscale-Japan (ADRAS-J) mission. The mission is the
world’s first attempt to safely approach, characterize
and survey the state of an existing piece of unprepared
large debris through rendezvous and proximity
operations. ADRAS-J is designed to rendezvous with an
unprepared Japanese H2A upper stage rocket body
(approximately 11 meters long, 4 meters in diameter, and
weighing approximately 3 tons), demonstrate proximity
operations, and gather images to assess the rocket
body’s movement and condition of the structure.
Unprepared objects in orbit pose an additional challenge
as they have not been prepared with any technologies
that enable docking or potential servicing or removal.
The mission will demonstrate some of the most
challenging rendezvous and proximity capabilities
necessary for on-orbit services.
Fullerton Hotel, Sydney
3 & 4 June 2024
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