R. Kurland, H. Schurig, M. Rosenfeld, M. J. Herriage, E. Gaddy, D. Keys, C. Faust, W. Andiario, M. Kurtz, E. Moyer
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Terra flexible blanket solar array deployment, on-orbit performance and future applications
The Terra spacecraft (formerly identified as EOS AM-1) is the flagship in a planned series of NASA/GSFC Earth observing system satellites designed to provide information on the health of the Earth's land, oceans, air, ice, and life as a total ecological global system. It has been successfully performing its mission since a late-December 1999 launch into a 705 km polar orbit. The spacecraft is powered by a single wing, flexible blanket array using single junction (SJ) gallium arsenide/germanium (GaAs/Ge) solar cells sized to provide 5 year end-of-life (EOL) power of greater than 5000 W at 127 volts. It is currently the highest voltage and power operational flexible blanket array with GaAs/Ge cells. This paper briefly describes the wing design as a basis for discussing the operation of the electronics and mechanisms used to achieve successful on-orbit deployment. Its orbital electrical performance to date is presented and compared to analytical predictions based on ground qualification testing. The paper concludes with a brief section on future applications and performance trends using advanced multi-junction cells and weight-efficient mechanical components.