Astroscale Awarded 800K Euro ESA Contract to Boost
Collision Avoidance Maneuver Capability on Congested
Orbital Highways
Mar. 10, 2022
Astroscale Ltd., the U.K.
and European subsidiary of Astroscale Holdings Inc.
(“Astroscale”), the market
leader in satellite servicing and long-term orbital
sustainability across all orbits, today announced
that the European Space Agency (ESA)
has selected Astroscale Ltd., to lead a collision
avoidance study that’s part of the Collision Risk
Estimation and Automated Mitigation (CREAM)
activities in ESA’s Space Safety Program.
CREAM is designed to
generate technologies for automated systems that can
determine the likelihood of orbital collisions with
greater accuracy, reduce the number of false alerts
by allowing reduced time between maneuver decisions
and close approaches, and finally to optimize
maneuver plans that are uploaded to satellites.
A team of Astroscale-led
experts, based in the UK and Europe, will focus on
developing concepts using innovative tools such as
inter-satellite links, large ground station networks
accessible as a service, and on-board processing
means to allow reducing the timeframe from alert to
likely collision. The CREAM 2 study, valued at
€800K, will recommend late commanding paths to allow
for late decisions in collision avoidance, saving
time and resource from unnecessary maneuvers.
To help solve this
challenge, Astroscale is partnering with GMV teams
in the UK, Portugal and Romania to garner their
expertise with on-ground and on-board collision
avoidance processes and information sharing systems.
In addition, OneWeb will share their expertise and
insights on the specific methods and challenges in
managing collision avoidance for large satellite
constellations.
“In the next decade
thousands of satellites are envisaged to be launched
into orbit. This presents a major space traffic
management challenge to ensure satellite locations
are coordinated and that collision warnings, which
will increase significantly per satellite, are
handled in an efficient way,” said Dr. Jason
Forshaw, Head of Future Business (Europe) at
Astroscale. “The CREAM 2 study will enable
Astroscale, and partners GMV and OneWeb, to start
developing techniques and prototyping software for
making decisions on collision avoidance. We
want all spacecraft to be safe and to reduce the
growing costs of collision avoidance for all
operators.”
The Astroscale-led
consortium will review alternative and novel means
of uploading commands to a satellite, such as
expanding ground station networks, data relays or
using a Galileo Signal-In-Space service. The study
will also look at innovative techniques for data
processing - such as onboard processing using GNSS
sensor data - predefined propulsive maneuvers, and
onboard maneuver computations. The analyses will
conclude by mid-2023 with recommendations on the
most viable solutions to allow for collision
avoidance late commanding.
Astroscale launched the
first commercial
in-orbit demonstrator ELSA-d
at an altitude of 550km, where large
constellations are already operating in a crowded
environment. In parallel, the
ELSA-M
multi-client servicer is
preparing for an in-orbit demonstration in 2024, as
such the study will explore the option to use the
ELSA-M in-orbit demonstration vehicle to test the
performance of the best solutions developed in the
CREAM 2 program.
“Our
ELSA-M servicer has
a range of communication options on-board, high
propulsive agility, good on-board processing
capability and a sophisticated ground segment – all
useful capabilities for a demonstration of
innovative new collision avoidance technology in the
next few years,” said Stephen Wokes, Engineering
Director at Astroscale Ltd.
“This CREAM 2 partnership
is key for GMV’s strategic roadmap because it
strengthens our long-lasting partnerships with both
Astroscale and OneWeb. It also represents another
success for GMV in the frame of the ESA’s Space
Safety program, where GMV is the main industrial
player with more than 30 projects in the last
decade, including its leadership of the CREAM 1
program activity,” said Mariella Graziano, Executive
Director of Strategy and Business Development of
Flight Systems and Robotics of Aerospace sector of
GMV. “For CREAM 2, we will work with our
Portuguese, British and Romanian GMV teams who share
extensive expertise in collision avoidance services
and operations as well as mission ground segment,
on-board systems and automation definition, and
development. The generation of new innovative
solutions for autonomous collision avoidance,
on-board and on-ground, will be used to ensure the
safety, the security and the sustainability of
near-future operations in space.”
“In the frame of the
CREAM 2 we aim to develop the technology for
automated collision avoidance to reduce staff
needs,” said Dr. Klaus Merz, Senior Collision
Avoidance Analyst and Coordinator of CREAM from
ESA’s Space Safety Program Office. “We have
therefore initiated studies investigating robust
decision criteria and maneuver designs, improved
means for coordination among operators of
spacecraft, as well as ways to guarantee late access
to spacecraft thus enabling later involvement of
human operators and analysts and reducing false
alarms.”
Merz concludes, “We’re
glad to have found a strong team for the CREAM 2
activity. It involves partners which are both
innovative and experienced in operating spacecraft
fleets and ground segments of various kinds of size,
complexity and automation level.”
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