Paper
26 February 2003 StarLight mission: a formation-flying stellar interferometer
Gary H. Blackwood, Oliver P. Lay, William D. Deininger, MiMi A. Gudim, Asif Ahmed, Riley M. Duren, Charley Noecker, Brian Barden
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Abstract
The StarLight mission is designed to validate the technologies of formation flying and stellar interferometry in space. The mission consists of two spacecraft in an earth-trailing orbit that formation-fly over relative ranges of 40 to 600m to an accuracy of 10 cm. The relative range and bearing of the spacecraft is sensed by a novel RF sensor, the Autonomous Formation Flyer sensor, which provides 2cm and 1mrad range and bearing knowledge between the spacecraft. The spacecraft each host instrument payloads for a Michelson interferometer that exploit the moving spacecraft to generate variable observing baselines between 30 and 125m. The StarLight preliminary design has shown that a formation-flying interferometer involves significant coupling between the major system elements - spacecraft, formation-flying control, formation-flying sensor, and the interferometer instrument. Mission requirements drive innovative approaches for long-range heterodyne metrology, optical design, glint suppression, formation estimation and control, spacecraft design, and mission operation. Experimental results are described for new technology development areas.
© (2003) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gary H. Blackwood, Oliver P. Lay, William D. Deininger, MiMi A. Gudim, Asif Ahmed, Riley M. Duren, Charley Noecker, and Brian Barden "StarLight mission: a formation-flying stellar interferometer", Proc. SPIE 4852, Interferometry in Space, (26 February 2003); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.460942
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Cited by 23 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Space operations

Interferometers

Sensors

Stars

Calibration

Metrology

Control systems

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