Instrument Host Information |
|
IDENTIFIER | urn:nasa:pds:context:instrument_host:spacecraft.a15s::1.1 |
NAME |
APOLLO 15 SUBSATELLITE |
TYPE |
Spacecraft |
DESCRIPTION |
Instrument Host Overview ======================== The Apollo 15 subsatellite (PFS-1) was a small spacecraft released into lunar orbit from the Apollo 15 Service Module. Its main objectives were to study the plasma, particle, and magnetic field environment of the Moon and map the lunar gravity field. Specifically it measured plasma and energetic particle intensities and vector magnetic fields, and facilitated tracking of the satellite velocity to high precision. A basic requirement was that the satellite acquire fields and particle data everywhere on the orbit around the Moon. A virtually identical subsatellite was also deployed by Apollo 16. The Moon's roughly circular orbit around the Earth at about 380000 km (60 Earth radii) carried the subsatellite into both interplanetary space and various regions of the Earth's magnetosphere. The satellite orbited the Moon and returned data from 4 August 1971 until January 1973. The subsatellite spacecraft was deployed on 4 August 1971 at 21:00:31 UT by launching it from the scientific instrument module of the Service Module at a relative velocity of approximately 1.2 m/s using a spring loaded device which also imparted a spin of 140 rpm to the satellite. After release, the booms were deployed, lowering the spin rate to 12 rpm. The spin axis was normal to the ecliptic plane within 1 degree. The orbital period was approximately 120 minutes, clockwise as viewed from the north. The perilune of the first orbit was 102 km, the apolune 139 km, and the inclination 28.5 degrees with respect to the Moon's equator, but the orbit was rapidly altered by gravitational perturbations. The geocentric ecliptic longitude of the Moon at the time of launch was 155 degrees. The subsatellite provided about 6 months of data coverage before two successive electronic failures in February 1972 caused the loss of most of the data channels. The surviving data channels were monitored intermittently until June 1972 and then more or less continuously until late January 1973, when ground support was terminated. It is assumed the subsatellite orbit decayed and it impacted the Moon sometime after this, the impact site is unknown. Spacecraft and Subsystems ------------------------- The Apollo 15 subsatellite spacecraft was a hexagonal cylinder 78 cm in length and approximately 36 cm across opposite corners of the hexagon with a mass of 36.3 kg. Three equally-spaced 1.5-meter-long deployable booms were hinged to one of the end platforms. A fluxgate magnetometer was on the end of one boom and the other two carried tip masses to provide balance. A short cylinder was attached to the end platform opposite the booms and was used for the initial deployment and spin-up of the satellite, which was achieved using a spring loaded mechanism in the SM bay. A wobble damper inside the satellite removed precessional and nutational motions. An S-band antenna protruded from the panel opposite the booms. Solar panels covering the six sides provided about 24 W of energy in sunlight and an average power of 14 W over one orbit of the Moon. The power subsystem also included a battery pack of 11 silver cadmium cells. An S-band transmitter was capable of sending 128 bits/s to the Earth. A magnetic core memory unit provided a storage capacity of 49,152 bits when the spacecraft could not transmit directly. Two solid state particle telescopes were mounted on an end panel of the spacecraft and four particle analyzer devices were attached to the sides. Scientific Experiments ---------------------- The following scientific experiments were performed on board or at the Apollo 15 subsatellite spacecraft: - The Lunar Plasma Shadows and Boundary Layer Experiment measured the density and energy of electrons and protons near the Moon. - The Biaxial Fluxgate Magnetometer measured the strength and orientation of the magnetic field near the Moon. - The S-Band Transponder allowed accurate tracking of the subsatellite spacecraft from Earth for mapping the gravitational field of the Moon. For more information about the subsatellite spacecraft and its experiments, see the Apollo 15 preliminary science report (1972) [APOLLO15A1972]. This instrument host description was provided by the NASA National Space Science Data Center (NSSDC). |
NAIF INSTRUMENT IDENTIFIER |
A15S |
SERIAL NUMBER | |
REFERENCES |
Apollo 15 Preliminary Science Report, NASA SP-289, 546 pages, published by
NASA, Washington, D.C., 1972. Davies, M.E., and T.R. Colvin, Lunar coordinates in the regions of the Apollo landers, Journal of Geophysical Research, Volume 105, Issue E8, pages 20,227-20,280, 2000, doi:10.1029/1999JE001165. |