Sunjammer (spacecraft)


Sunjammer was a NASA mission intended to demonstrate a solar sail constructed by LGarde, but was cancelled before launch. The largest solar sail made as of 2013, Sunjammer was named after a 1964 Arthur C. Clarke story of the same name, Sunjammer, in which several solar sails compete in a race across the Solar System. Sunjammer was slated to launch in January 2015 as the secondary payload of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, along with the Earth observation satellite DSCOVR. Citing a lack of confidence in its contractor's ability to deliver, the mission was cancelled in October 2014.

Spacecraft design

Constructed of Kapton in order to withstand the extreme temperatures of space, Sunjammer has a width and height of, giving it a total surface area of over and making it the largest solar sail as of 2013. Despite its huge surface area, Sunjammer has a thickness of only 5 μm, giving it an extremely low weight of about and allowing it to be stored in a space the size of a dishwasher. Once in space, the large surface area of the solar sail would allow it to achieve a thrust of about 0.01 N—roughly the weight of a sugar packet. To control its orientation, and via this its speed and direction, Sunjammer was to use gimballed vanes located at the tips of each of its 4 booms, instead of thrusters, completely eliminating the need for any propellant other than the rays of the Sun.
In addition to being a demonstration craft, Sunjammer was to collect scientific data in its own right. With several instruments to detect various aspects of space weather, Sunjammer could have eventually become part of a larger network of solar sails studying the Sun, allowing for the creation of a more robust early-warning system for space weather.

Mission

Prior to its cancellation, Sunjammer was slated for launch in January 2015 aboard a Falcon 9 rocket, a slight delay from an earlier projection of November 2014. It was to launch as a secondary payload along with the primary DSCOVR Earth observation and space weather satellite. Within two months of launch the spacecraft was to test various technologies, such as deployment, vector control via altitude vanes, and eventually reaching a location near the Earth-Sun L1 Lagrangian point.

Payloads

Sunjammer was to carry two British space science payloads: the Solar Wind Analyser developed by the Mullard Space Science Laboratory of University College London, and the MAGIC magnetometer developed by the Blackett Laboratory of Imperial College London.
Sunjammer was to carry a Celestis Memorial Spaceflight payload of cremated remains.