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SYSTEMS DESIGN AND INTEGRATION OF SMALL SCALE NANO AND PICO SATELLITES

Author
Naumann, Philip
Abstract
Within the past decade, the aerospace engineering industry has evolved outside the constraints of using single, large, custom satellites. Due to increased reliability and robustness of commercial off the shelf (COTS) printed circuit board (PCB) components, missions instead have transitioned towards deploying swarms of smaller satellites. This approach significantly decreases the mission cost by reducing custom engineering and deployment expenses. Nanosatellites are able to be quickly developed with a more modular design at lowered risk. The Alpha mission at Cornell Space Systems Studio is fabricated in this manner. However, for the purpose of this mission, only one satellite was initially developed. This paper will discuss a systems engineering approach to the development of this satellite. As a disclaimer, this paper is written from a systems perspective. Therefore it will follow many subsystems from a wide range of functionalities. The research in this paper was kept broad with the hope to contribute to the mission as a system, through a range of development phases including validation and verification of existing methods. The two systems that will be primarily focused on are the Attitude Control System (ACS) of the carrier nanosatellite (cubesat), and the RF communications on the excreted picosatellites (chipsat). Milestones achieved in chipsat RF include chipsat to chipsat communication, chipsat to SDR ground station communication, packet creation, error correction, appending a preamble, and filtering the signal. Achievements on the ACS side included controller traceability/verification and validation, software rigidity tests, hardware endurance testing, Kane damper and IMU tuning. These developments matured the technological readiness level (TRL) of our systems in preparation for satellite deployment.
Description
95 pages Supplemental file(s) description: None.
Date Issued
2022-05Subject
Attitude Control; Kane Damper; optimization; Radio Communication; Systems modeling
Committee Chair
Peck, Mason
Committee Member
Daziano, Ricardo
Degree Discipline
Systems Engineering
Degree Name
M.S., Systems Engineering
Degree Level
Master of Science
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International
Rights URI
Type
dissertation or thesis
The following license files are associated with this item:
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International