Courtesy of NASA's National Space Science Data Center
Launch Date/Time: 2007-09-14 at 18:25 UTC
Launch Vehicle: H-2A Launch
Launch Site: Tanegashima, Japan
Mass: 1984.0 kg
Nominal Power: 3486.0 W
Description
Kaguya ended its mission as planned, impacting the Moon on 10 June 2009 at 18:25 UT (3:25 a.m. June 11 Japan Standard Time) near 80.4 degrees east longitude, 65.5 degrees south latitude on the Earth-facing side of the Moon. The area was in darkness at the time of the impact, allowing observation of the impact flash from Earth..Kaguya (formerly SELENE, for SELenological and ENgineering Explorer), is a Japanese Space Agency (JAXA) lunar orbiter mission. The primary objective of the mission is a global survey of the Moon, obtaining data on elemental abundance, mineralogical composition, topography, geology, gravity, and the lunar and solar-terrestrial plasma environments and to develop critical technologies for future lunar exploration, such as lunar polar orbit injection, three-axis attitude stabilization, and thermal control. The mission consists of three satellites, an orbiter containing most of the scientific equipment, a VLBI (Very Long Baseline Interferometry) Radio (VRAD) satellite, and a relay satellite designed to receive a doppler ranging signal from the orbiter when it is around the far side out of direct contact wth the Earth and transmit the signal to Earth to estimate the far-side gravitational field.
Spacecraft and Subsystems
The orbiter main bus is box-shaped, roughly 2.1 x 2.1 x 4.8 m, divided into a 2.8 m long upper, or mission module which contains most of the scientific instruments and a 1.2 m long lower, or propulsion module. A solar array wing is mounted on one side of the spacecraft. A 1.3 meter high-gain antenna is mounted on one side 90 degrees from the solar panel. A 12 m magnetometer boom juts out of the top of the spacecraft and four 15 m radar sounder antennas protrude from the top and bottom corners of the mission module. The total launch mass of the spacecraft, including 795 kg of propellant and the two satellites, is 2885 kg.Power is supplied by the solar array, consisting of 22 square meters of GaAs/Ge cells which can generate up to 3486 W and charges four NiH2 batteries of 50 V, 35 Ah capacity. Communications are via S- and X-band through the high-gain antenna with a data rate up to 10 Mbps downlink to a 60 m ground dish in X-band, and 40 or 2 kbps S-band downlink. Four S-band omnidirectional antennas are used for command uplink at 1 kbps. Onboard data recording capacity is 10 Gbytes. Thermal control is achieved by radiators, louvers, and heaters.
A 500 N bipropellant (NTO/N2H4) main engine is mounted in the propulsion module. Orbital maintenance and yaw-pitch attitude are controlled by twelve bipropellant 20 N thrusters. Roll attitude is controlled by eight monopropellant 1 N thrusters. The spacecraft is three-axis stabilized with attitude control provided by four Sun sensors, two IMUs (Inertial Measurement Units), two star trackers, four 20 Nms reaction wheels, and the thrusters. The mission module carries 13 instruments for use in science investigations: a multi-band imager, terrain camera, high definition TV camera, spectral profiler, x-ray spectrometer, gamma-ray spectrometer, radar sounder, laser altimeter, magnetometer, plasma imager, charged particle spectrometer, plasma analyzer, and radio science equipment.
VRAD Subsatellite "Ouna"
The VRAD subsatellite, Ouna, is an octagonal cylinder 0.99 x 0.99 x 0.65 m in size with a mass of 53 kg. A dipole antenna protrudes from the top center of the subsatellite. The spacecraft is spin-stabilized at 10 rpm and has no propulsion units. Power is provided by a 70 W Si solar cell array covering the sides of the satellite which charges a 13 AH, 26 V NiMH battery. It holds one X-band and three S-band radio sources. The satellite in conjunction with the relay satellite will enable differential VLBI observations from the ground. The spacecraft will start in a 100 x 800 km polar orbit and is expected to survive in orbit for over one year. The VRAD and Relay satellites are mounted on top of the mission module before release.
Relay Subsatellite "Okina"
The relay subsatellite is similar to the Ouna VRAD satellite, an octagonal cylinder 0.99 x 0.99 x 0.65 m in size with a mass of 53 kg. A dipole antenna protrudes from the top center of the subsatellite and four small S-band patch antennas are mounted on the spacecraft, two on the top deck and two on the bottom. The spacecraft is spin-stabilized at 10 rpm and has no propulsion units. Power is provided by a 70 W Si solar cell array covering the sides of the satellite which charges a 13 AH, 26 V NiMH battery. The relay subsatellite contains one X-band and three S-band VLBI radio sources and a transponder and will relay the 4-way Doppler ranging signal between a ground station and the orbiter for the far side gravity field investigation from a 100 x 2400 km orbit. Okina impacted the Moon on 12 February 2009.
Mission Profile
Kaguya (SELENE) launched 01:31:01 UT (10:31:01 a.m. Japan Standard Time) on 14 September 2007 on an H-IIA rocket from Tanegashima Space Center. Separation of the spacecraft from the launch vehicle occurred 45 minutes 34 seconds after launch. Kaguya deployed its solar panels and high-gain antenna and completed two orbital maneuvers, the last on 17 September to put it into a 924 x 232,731 km Earth orbit with a period of 4 days, 23 hours, 33 minutes. After three more correction manuevers, a lunar transfer trajectory injection burn was conducted. Kaguya carried out its first lunar orbit injection at 21:20 UT on 3 October (6:20 a.m. October 4 JST) and entered a 101 x 11 741 km lunar orbit with a period of 16 hours, 42 minutes. The spacecraft made 6 orbit-transfer maneuvers to lower the orbit to a 118 minute, 80 x 128 km polar science orbit by 19 October. During the transition to lower orbit, the relay satellite Okina was released into a 100 km x 2400 km polar orbit on 9 October at 00:36 UT and the VRAD satellite Ouna was released into a 100 x 800 km orbit at 04:28 UT on 12 October. Normal operations from orbit for the Kaguya spacecraft started on 20 October, the 12 meter magnetometer mast, two 15 meter Radar Sounder dipole antennas, and the telescope gimbal were deployed between 28 and 31 October. Checkout of the subsatellites will be complete by 5 November, check out of other instruments will continue until the beginning of December. The main orbiter will maintain the near circular orbit for one year of science operations, using correction burns roughly every two months to maintain the orbit within 30 km of the 100 km nominal orbit. An option to lower the orbit to 40 - 70 km after one year is being considered.Kaguya is named for Kaguya-hime (Princess Kaguya), a visitor to Earth from the Moon in a 10th century Japanese folk tale "Taketori Monogatari" (The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter). The relay satellites, "Okina" and "Ouna" are named after the old man and woman who find and adopt Kaguya-hine.