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Boeing Readies For First Ever Conjoined Satellite Launch

Zothecula writes Boeing has successfully joined two of its 702SP satellites in a stacked configuration in preparation for a launch scheduled for early 2015. Aside from being the first involving conjoined satellites, the launch will also put the first satellites to enter service boasting an all-electric propulsion system into orbit. "Designed by Boeing Network & Space Systems and its defense and security advanced prototyping arm, Phantom Works, the 702SP (small platform) satellites are an evolution of the company's 702 satellite. Operating in the low- to mid-power ranges of 3 to 9 kW, instead of chemical propulsion, the satellites boast an all-electric propulsion system that Boeing says minimizes the mass of the spacecraft and maximizes payload capacity."

5 of 67 comments (clear)

  1. Re:So, ion drive or something??? by ubergeek2009 · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to wikipedia the 702SP uses xenon.

  2. Re:So, ion drive or something??? by tomhath · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, ion thrusters. Used to adjust from the original elliptical orbit to the final circular one (and yea, it takes a long time to do that compared to a conventional booster). They've been using these to maintain position for almost 20 years.

  3. Re:So, ion drive or something??? by jehan60188 · · Score: 4, Informative

    good question, the efficiency comes from the speeds achievable
    squirting pressurized gas out of a nozzle into space results in an exit velocity of ve = sqrt(C), where C is some clever arrangement of specific heat, R, T, etc (it's been a while since i've study nozzle design)
    Basically, the exit velocity is limited by mostly the chemical's temperature; quadrupling the absolute temperature would only double the speed, so a lot of energy would be needed

    ions are different (bare with me, I'm not an electrical engineer), because you just need to create them (chemical reaction, heat, etc), and then control them (static field, magnetic field). it's a lot lower power, and a lot greater impulse (over a lot longer time) than what ejecting molecules in to space can provide

  4. Re:So, ion drive or something??? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Informative

    And it seems to have a 4.5 kW power input, a specific impulse of 34 kNs/kg (insert an anti-Imperial rant here), and gives a thrust of up to 165 mN, which is fairly decent, Dawn has to do with about a half of that.

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  5. Re:First 'conjoined' satellites? by voidptr · · Score: 3, Informative

    Or GRAIL.

    Or the Orbcomm OG2 constellation that went up in July...

    Launching multiple payloads on a single launch isn't exactly new. It sounds like the innovation here is using the satellites themselves as load structures for each other during launch rather than something like an ESPA ring to save weight and payload volume, but launching more than one satellite per mission is pretty common.

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