Updated Heliostorm Warning Mission: Enhancements Based on New Technology
Roy Young
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center
The Heliostorm (also referred to as Geostorm) mission has been regarded as the best choice
for the first application of solar sail technology. The objective of Heliostorm is to
obtain data from an orbit station slightly displaced from the ecliptic at or nearer to the
Sun than 0.98 AU, which places it twice as close to the sun as Earth's natural L1 point at
0.993 AU. Heliostorm has been the subject of several mission studies over the past decade,
with the most complete study conducted in 1999 in conjunction with a proposed New
Millennium Program (NMP) Space Technology 5 (ST-5) flight opportunity. Recently, over a
two and one-half year period dating from 2002 through 2005, NASA's In-Space Propulsion
Technology Program (ISTP) matured solar sail technology from laboratory components to
fully integrated systems, demonstrated in as relevant a space environment as could
feasibly be simulated on the ground. Work under this program has yielded promising results
for enhanced Heliostorm mission performance. This paper will present the preliminary
results of an updated Heliostorm mission design study including the enhancements
incorporated during the design, development, analysis and testing of the system ground
demonstrator.
Presented at ISDC 2011 - Huntsville.
Paper and presentation charts are not available.