System Modelling of Very Low Earth Orbit Satellites for Earth Observation
N.H. Crisp, P.C.E. Roberts, K.L. Smith, V.T.A. Oiko, V., Sulliotti-Linner, V. Hanessian, G.H. Herdrich, Daniel Garc\'ia-Almi\~nana, D., Kataria, S. Seminari

TL;DR
This paper develops system models for VLEO satellites, exploring new materials and propulsion technologies that enable lower orbits, leading to significant reductions in satellite mass and costs for Earth observation missions.
Contribution
It introduces integrated system models for novel aerodynamic materials and atmosphere-breathing electric propulsion, enabling optimized satellite design in very low Earth orbit.
Findings
Potential 75% reduction in system mass for optical EO satellites.
Over 50% savings in development and manufacturing costs.
Significant system-level trade-offs identified for VLEO satellite design.
Abstract
The operation of satellites in very low Earth orbit (VLEO) has been linked to a variety of benefits to both the spacecraft platform and mission design. Critically, for Earth observation (EO) missions a reduction in altitude can enable smaller and less powerful payloads to achieve the same performance as larger instruments or sensors at higher altitude, with significant benefits to the spacecraft design. As a result, renewed interest in the exploitation of these orbits has spurred the development of new technologies that have the potential to enable sustainable operations in this lower altitude range. In this paper, system models are developed for (i) novel materials that improve aerodynamic performance enabling reduced drag or increased lift production and resistance to atomic oxygen erosion and (ii) atmosphere-breathing electric propulsion (ABEP) for sustained drag compensation or…
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