NOAA's GOES-R satellite solar array spreads its wing

NOAA's GOES-R satellite solar array spreads its wing
Photo of the deployment test of the GOES-R Solar Array Wing Assembly (SAWA) was conducted at Lockheed Martin Space Systems on May 5, 2015. Credit: Lockheed Martin Corporation

The solar panel array on NOAA's Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES) – R spacecraft has been successfully deployed in a test conducted at Lockheed Martin Corporation in Littleton, Colorado. The five sections of the solar array resemble a giant black wing.

Engineers completed the deployment of the Solar Array Wing Assembly including the Solar Pointing Platform in a cleanroom facility where the GOES-R satellite is being assembled.

The Sun Pointing Platform holds two of the GOES-R space weather instruments: the Extreme Ultraviolet and X-ray Irradiance Sensors (EXIS) and the Solar Ultraviolet Imager (SUVI).

Engineers unfurled the five panels of the solar panel array on rails that help simulate deployment in the zero-gravity environment of space. The will generate more than 4,000 watts of power for NOAA's GOES-R satellite once it is launched in March 2016 and resembles a giant black wing. The wing is folded up at launch and deploys once in orbit, where it will rotate once a day on orbit to continuously point its solar array photovoltaic cells towards the sun.

Photovoltaic cells in the solar array derive electricity from sunlight. Photovoltaics is a method that uses semiconductors to convert solar radiation into direct current electricity. The GOES-R photovoltaics in the will power the entire satellite including all of the instruments, computers, data processors, attitude control sensors and actuators, and telecommunications equipment.

The GOES-R solar array deployment test was conducted at Lockheed Martin Space Systems on May 5, 2015. Narrated by GOES-R engineer Jeff Spira. Credit: Lockheed Martin Corporation

The GOES-R satellite, slated to launch in 2016, is now ready for environmental testing. Environmental testing simulates the harsh conditions of launch and the space environment once the satellite is in orbit. The GOES-R satellite and its instruments will undergo a variety of rigorous tests which includes subjecting the to vibration, acoustics and temperature testing as part of this process.

More information: For more information about GOES-R, visit: www.goes-r.gov/

Provided by NASA

Citation: NOAA's GOES-R satellite solar array spreads its wing (2015, June 17) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2015-06-noaa-goes-r-satellite-solar-array.html
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