An external coronagraph is due to fly on the formation flying mission Proba-3, revealing normally unseen sections of the solar corona.

(麻豆淫院Org.com) -- All space missions are difficult. Docking a pair of spacecraft is tough but flying multiple satellites together in formation is the real cutting edge.

A new simulator is now allowing mission planners to get to grips with multi-satellite missions to come, starting with ESA鈥檚 Proba-3.

Several space agencies are preparing formation-flying missions, but it is hard to overstate the difficulty they face: separate expensive pieces of hardware, each one zipping through space at several kilometres per second, may have to manoeuvre to within metres of each other to achieve their goals.

The relative positions of the satellites must be maintained precisely as they close in: lose control of one part of the formation, even momentarily, and the satellites risk destruction. And orbital dynamics dictate the satellites鈥 orbits will tend to cross as they circle Earth, another worrying factor for their controllers.

Even so, there are specific tasks only formation flying can do - and a new computing resource should help to achieve them.

The Formation Flying is a suite of software running across linked computers to simulate all aspects of a formation-flying mission. Overseen by ESA鈥檚 Software Systems division at the agency鈥檚 ESTEC and technology centre in the Netherlands, this new facility can emulate the running of more than a single satellite at once.

鈥淚t is a generic simulator for formation-flying missions, whether they include two spacecraft or as many as five or six,鈥 explained Raffaella Franco.

鈥淪imulations are a computer-intensive business anyway, but trying to emulate more than one spacecraft鈥檚 onboard computer and software simply will not run on a single computer, not to mention the rest of the satellite and the associated ground systems and inter-satellite links.

鈥淚nstead, the Formation Flying Test Bed allows the distribution of software across multiple computers without affecting the user experience.鈥

The testbed addresses crucial operational factors for formation flying, including mission and vehicle management, guidance navigation, dealing with faults and communicating between satellites.

The facility can also be used for training satellite controllers, preparing new procedures or even as a troubleshooting tool once a mission has made it to orbit.

To help develop the testbed a demonstration model was created based on Proba-3, ESA鈥檚 first formation flying mission, due for launch in 2014-15. Proba-3鈥檚 two satellites will form the first 鈥榚xternal coronagraph鈥 in orbit, with one maintaining an artificial eclipse of the Sun as seen from the other, so that hidden details of the solar corona can be seen.

The testbed was developed by Belgium鈥檚 Spacebel, also responsible for Proba-3鈥檚 flight software. The project was backed through ESA鈥檚 General Support Technology Programme, which aims to mature prototypes into operational hardware.

Provided by European Space Agency