The HEAO experience - design through operations
Abstract
The design process and performance of the NASA High Energy Astronomy Observatories (HEAO-1, 2, and 3) are surveyed from the initiation of the program in 1968 through the end of HEAO-3 operation in May, 1981, with a focus on the attitude control and determination subsystem (ACDS). The science objectives, original and revised overall design concepts, final design for each spacecraft, and details of the ACDS designs are discussed, and the stages of the ACDS design process, including redefinition to achieve 50 percent cost reduction, detailed design of common and mission-unique hardware and software, unit qualification, subsystem integration, and observatory-level testing, are described. Overall and ACDS performance is evaluated for each mission and found to meet or exceed design requirements despite some difficulties arising from errors in startracker-ACDS-interface coordination and from gyroscope failures. These difficulties were resolved by using the flexibility of the software design. The implicationns of the HEAO experience for the design process of future spacecraft are suggested.
- Publication:
-
Automatic Control in Space 1982
- Pub Date:
- 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983aucs.proc..489H
- Keywords:
-
- Airborne/Spaceborne Computers;
- Computer Systems Design;
- Heao;
- Numerical Control;
- Satellite Attitude Control;
- Satellite Design;
- Aerospace Engineering;
- Computer Programs;
- Cost Reduction;
- Hardware;
- Launch Vehicles and Space Vehicles