Preparation, Handover, and Conduction of PRISMA Mission Operations at GSOC

The experimental satellite project PRISMA was initiated in 2005 by Sweden, France, Denmark, and Germany, with the Swedish Space Cooperation (SSC) as the project lead. The purpose was the demonstration of necessary techniques and the validation of the respective sensor technology for future missions...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Faller, Ralf, Ohndorf, Andreas, Schlepp, Benjamin, Eberle, Sabrina
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/78565/
https://elib.dlr.de/78565/1/IAC-12-B6.2.9_PRISMA_Mission_Operations_at_GSOC_x13878.pdf
Description
Summary:The experimental satellite project PRISMA was initiated in 2005 by Sweden, France, Denmark, and Germany, with the Swedish Space Cooperation (SSC) as the project lead. The purpose was the demonstration of necessary techniques and the validation of the respective sensor technology for future missions that involve close formation flight and rendezvous in space. At that time, the German Aerospace Center DLR was not only involved in providing satellite GPS hardware and navigation software components but also as one of the experimenters for GPS-based navigation and autonomous formation flight. The idea of also conduction a part of the flight operations phase from Germany came into discussion at the end of 2009, with the purpose of sharing mission operations cost. This was agreed by Sweden and Germany shortly before launch of the two PRISMA satellites, which took place in June 2010. Nine months later, mission operations were handed over from SSC’s control center in Solna, Stockholm, to the German Space Operations Center (GSOC) in Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany. After successful operations by GSOC, the re-hand over of the mission back to Solna was performed in August 2011. The baseline concept for the German PRISMA ground segment foresaw cloning of the Swedish ground segment developed by SSC at GSOC to minimize the development and test effort, but specific adaptations were needed to integrate PRISMA into GSOC’s multimission environment. Furthermore, the original station network, which consisted only of the Kiruna ground station in North Sweden, was extended by two additional DLR ground stations in Weilheim, Germany, and in Inuvik, Canada. That extension proved especially beneficial to the shift concept. Another important aspect was the training of the German operations personnel in a short time. This was realized by training on the job concept, which kept the additional workload for teaching and training on acceptable levels and at the same time supported the Swedish flight operations team during their operations phase. This ...