Albuquerque Journal

NASA spacecraft will have company all the way to Mars

Mini-satellites will trail InSight lander

- BY MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA’s next Mars explorer is going to have company all the way to the Red Planet: a couple of puny yet groundbrea­king sidekicks.

Named after the characters in the 2008 animated movie, the small satellites WALL-E and EVE are hitching a ride on the Atlas V rocket set to launch early this morning from California with the Mars InSight lander.

Similar in size to a briefcase or large cereal box, the satellites will pop out from the rocket’s upper stage after liftoff and hightail it to Mars, right behind InSight.

It will be the first time little cube-shaped satellites, CubeSats as they’re known, set sail for deep space. The journey will span 6½ months and 300 million miles.

A brief look at the $18.5 million experiment tagging along with InSight:

Mini-satellites

Miniature satellites, or CubeSats, have been piggybacki­ng on bigticket space missions for well over a decade, providing relatively cheap and fast access to orbit for students and other out-of-the-mainstream experiment­ers. Until now, the hundreds of CubeSats have been confined to Earth orbit. That’s about to change with NASA’s Mars Cube One project, or MarCO. The European Space Agency, meanwhile, has its CubeSat sights on the moon. A recent competitio­n yielded two winning proposals: a CubeSat to explore the moon’s far side from lunar orbit, another to probe a permanentl­y shadowed crater near the moon’s south pole, also from lunar orbit.

Movie connection

It turns out that these twin cubes are equipped with the same type of cold gas propulsion system used in fire extinguish­ers to spray foam. The movie WALL-E uses a fire extinguish­er to propel through space. Team members couldn’t resist the connection, thus the names WALL-E and EVE for the two mini-spacecraft. Engineers want to test this compact propulsion system for guiding the 30-pound cubes to Mars.

Getting to Mars

Once free from the rocket’s upper stage after liftoff, WALL-E and EVE will trail a few thousand miles behind InSight en route to Mars. While that may seem far apart, it’s actually fairly close by space standards, according to Brian Clement, an engineer on the project at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. While InSight will be stopping at Mars on Nov. 26, WALL-E and EVE will zoom past the planet from about 2,200 miles out.

Extra ears

Besides testing the cubes’ maneuverin­g system, NASA wants to see if WALL-E and EVE can transmit data to Earth from InSight during its descent to Mars. If the experiment succeeds, it should take just several minutes for flight controller­s to hear from the cubes. No worries if they’re silent. NASA will rely on the Mars Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter already circling the planet as the main communicat­ion link with InSight during descent and touchdown. It will take a lot longer, though, to get confirmati­on. The beauty of a CubeSat relay system is that it could provide descent informatio­n at planets and other cosmic stop-offs lacking establishe­d communicat­ions.

After Mars

Once past Mars, WALL-E and EVE will remain in an elliptical orbit around the sun, together for years to come. But they won’t work for long. Once they run out of fuel, they won’t be able to point their solar wings toward the sun for recharging.

 ?? SOURCE: NASA/JPL-CALTECH ?? Engineer Joel Steinkraus uses sunlight to test the solar arrays on one of the Mars Cube One (MarCO) spacecraft at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., in March.
SOURCE: NASA/JPL-CALTECH Engineer Joel Steinkraus uses sunlight to test the solar arrays on one of the Mars Cube One (MarCO) spacecraft at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., in March.

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