Application of Solar Electric Propulsion to the Low Thrust Lunar Transit of the Gateway Power and Propulsion Element
NASA has committed to returning to the moon, landing the first woman and the next man on its surface. To support a sustained lunar presence, NASA will assemble an orbital platform in a quasi-stable orbit near the moon known as a Near Rectilinear Halo Orbit (NRHO). This platform, known as Gateway, will support long duration exploration missions targeting the lunar south pole. An architecture simplification implemented in 2020 combined the first two elements of the Gateway together onto a single commercial launch vehicle (CLV). When launched, the Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) and the Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO) will form the initial capability of NASA’s Gateway. The PPE, with its high-power Solar Electric Propulsion (SEP) system, will propel the combined vehicle from an elliptical Earth parking orbit to the target NRHO. A transit of such a large mass, delivered to the moon from a single launch vehicle, is only made possible using the highly efficient SEP system. Delivering the same mass via more traditional chemical propulsion systems would require major modifications to the mission architecture, significantly more propellant mass, and could necessitate the use of a more powerful launch vehicle. This paper describes the design of the nominal low-thrust transit by which Gateway will be delivered to the NRHO utilizing the PPE SEP system. Additionally, this paper captures how the unique capabilities of the PPE electric propulsion system have guided the design of the trajectory and how mission requirements have, in turn, impacted the maturation of the SEP system.
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