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No. 41 - In-flight Commissioning of the Near Sun Hibernation Mode

No. 41 - In-flight Commissioning of the Near Sun Hibernation Mode

Report for period 22 April - 13 May 2005The main activity in this three week period was the in-flight commissioning of the Near SunHibernation Mode (NSHM), during which the Rosetta spacecraft spent days in this special low activity mode, with attitude controlled via Star Tracker and thrusters only (gyroscopes and reaction wheels are inactive).

NSHM commissioning started on 25 April and ended on 12 May, with a transition back into the normal GSEP attitude control mode (with new pointing guidance). During the whole commissioning period daily monitoring (except for the weekends) of the spacecraft status and performance was carried out via New Norcia. A first analysis of the commissioning results indicates that the spacecraft performed as expected both from an AOCS (Attitude and Orbit Control System) and system level point of view.

No payload operations were carried out, with the exception of SREM, which is active continuously for radiation monitoring.

A total of 16 New Norcia passes, each with a duration of about 7 hours commanding, were taken over the three weeks of the reporting period. Pass duration had to be reduced slightly (of the order of one hour per day) due to a limitation in the azimuth range of the antenna, which only affects the Rosetta mission when the spacecraft declination is close to the one of the ground station latitude. This azimuth limitation is a seasonal effect and will stop affecting Rosetta as from 25 May.

NNO Pass

Date

DOY

Main Activity

420

24.04.05

114

Monitor pass – verify NSHM preconditions

421

25.04.05

115

Enter NSHM

422

26.04.05

116

Widen NSHM control deadband

423

27.04.05

117

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

424

28.04.05

118

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

425

29.04.05

119

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

428

02.05.05

122

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

429

03.05.05

123

Reduce deadband and repoint Solar Array

430

04.05.05

124

HGA repositioning test

431

05.05.05

125

Monitoring pass – NSHM narrow deadband

432

06.05.05

126

Widen NSHM control deadband

435

09.05.05

129

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

436

10.05.05

130

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

437

11.05.05

131

Monitoring pass – NSHM wide deadband

438

12.05.05

132

Exit NSHM

439

13.05.05

133

Monitor pass – verify TTC reconfiguration

At the end of the last New Norcia pass in the reporting period (DOY 133) Rosetta was at 25.6 million km from the Earth. The one-way signal travel time was 1 minute and 25.3 seconds.

Science Results First Earth Swing-by

On 4 and 5 March 2005 the VIRTIS instrument performed observations of the Earth and of the Moon during the first Earth Swing-by.

Operations were divided in three sets of observations:

  • Moon observation before closest approach with the Earth
  • Moon observation after closest approach during the S/C Autonomous navigation mode (Asteroid fly-by Mode)
  • Earth observation

The used set of instrument parameters and the observing conditions are summarized in the table below.

Observation Code VIRTIS#02 VIRTIS#05 VIRTIS#06
Date and time (UT) 4 Mar 19:30 5 Mar 08:00 5 Mar 12:30
Target Moon Moon Earth
Distance (km) 400 000 210 000 250 000
Phase Angle (°) 111.3 127.9 91.1
Visible surface (%) 32 19 49
Ground resolution (km) 100 52.5 62.5
Integration Times (s)
Channel M-VIS
Channel M-IR
Channel H
1, 20, 30
0.5, 2.0, 3.0, 3.5
5, 10
1, 15
1.5, 2.0, 3.0
5, 10
1
0.5, 1
5, 10
Spectral
Number of Pixels
Sampling M-IR (nm)
Sampling M-VIS (nm)
432
9.4
1.9
432
9.4
1.9
432, 144
9.4, 28.2
1.9, 5.7
Spatial (only for M)
FOV along slit (mrad)
FOV along Scan (mrad)
IFOV (mrad)
64
15
0.25
64
15
0.25
64
64
0.25


Moon observations (4 March 2005)

The Moon was observed on 4 March at about 19:30 UT from a distance of 400 000 km and with a phase angle of 111.3 degrees, thus only about 32% of the lunar surface was visible.

The lunar disc subtends an angular size of about 8.75 mrad, as seen from VIRTIS, equivalent to about 35 pixels. VIRTIS-H has been used as well for collecting several spectra of the non-illuminated area of the Earth. Four different integration times were used for the infrared (IR) (3.5, 3.0, 2.0, 0.5 s) and three integration times for the Visual (Vis) (1, 20 and 30 s).

The Moon was imaged in the High spatial / High spectral resolution mode, thus achieving a 100 km spatial resolution on the ground and a spectral resolution of 2 nm and 9 nm in the Vis and IR ranges respectively.

Description: Simulated view of the Moon for the VIRTIS observations on 4 March 2005.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: VIRTIS image of the Moon. It is possible to discern several features: Oceanus Procellarum, the Kepler crater and Mare Humorum.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Plot of three spectra taken at three different locations on the Moon: Kepler crater (blue), Mare Humorum (green) and Oceanus Procellarum (red).

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Monochromatic image of the Moon at a wavelength of 1300 nm. The Sun illumination is from the left.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Monochromatic image of the Moon at a wavelength of 5000 nm. The Sun illumination is from the left.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: False-colour image of the Moon, generated by combining the images taken at three different wavelengths: 2225 nm, 3000 nm and 3650 nm.


Earth observations (5 March 2005)

The Earth images were acquired after the point of closest approach when the Earth was at a distance of 250 000 km. Therefore the pixel size was of the order of 62 km. The integration time was changed in order to verify the VIRTIS performances under different conditions, enabling also the checking of the Instrument transfer function. Earth images were acquired both in the visible and in the infrared, with a mode at high spatial and spectral resolution.

Description: VIRTIS-M typical data cube. The Earth image has been obtained in 432 bands in the visible (between 0.25 and 1 micrometers) and 432 bands in the infrared (between 1.0 and 5 micrometers).

Wavelength: Optical

Description: An RGB composite image of the Earth at visible wavelengths.
Through the clouds, it is possible to distinguish the Argentina and the Andes mountain chain.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: RGB composite image of three channels. The channels for the plot were selected in order to show the continuum both in the NIR and in the IR. 

Wavelength:  Infrared

Description: Spectrum of the Earth. Indicated in this plot are also the three different wavelengths that were used to create the above RGB composite.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description:  Distribution of CO2 bands in the Earth's atmosphere. This image is a RGB composite obtained by selecting the 4.2 micrometers band for the green and the two relative continua for blue and red, as shown in the first of the four spectra below.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Same image as above, but stretched with a Gaussian filter. Two regions characterized by a strong CO2 emission band are identified (yellow), respectively corresponding to Antarctica and to the antipodes of the sub solar point, where the Earth temperature is very low.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Typical spectrum of CO2 enhanced region (yellow areas in above RGB image).

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Spectrum of regions near the terminator

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: Spectrum of illuminated regions. The spectrum is dominated by CO2 and the water band.

Wavelength: Infrared

Description: During the Earth-Moon fly-by VIRTIS-H also observed the Earth. This is an example of a typical VIRTIS-H spectrum.

 

Last Update: 1 September 2019
12-Nov-2024 09:01 UT

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