 Masterpieces of miniaturisation


 |  | One set of solar panels is deployed for testing
| | The SMART-1 spacecraft spans 14 metres with its solar panels extended, but otherwise everything for propulsion, communications, housekeeping and instrumentation fits into a cube just 1 metre across. Propulsion by an ion engine is not the only innovative technology on SMART-1. Its solar panels use an advanced type of gallium-arsenide solar cells in preference to the traditional silicon cells. And it is testing new communications and navigational techniques.  |  | SMART-1 packed, ready for launch
| | Out of a total mass at launch of 370 kilograms, the payload available for a dozen technological and scientific investigations is 19 kilograms. Like other components of the spacecraft, the scientific instruments use state-of-the-art concepts and methods of miniaturization to save space and economise on mass. For example the X-ray telescope D-CIXS makes a cube just 15 centimetres wide and weighs less than 5 kilograms.
“
Building a spacecraft for ESA means fitting together many pieces coming from different countries. Luckily the cross-border teamwork is magnificent.”
Peter Rathsman, Swedish Space Corporation, Prime Contractor for SMART-1
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SMART-1 mission overview
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| Purpose |
Flight testing electric propulsion and other deep-space technologies, while performing scientific observations of the Moon. |
| Spacecraft |
One cubic metre, 370 kilograms. Solar panels span 14 metres when deployed and provide 1.9 kWatts of power. |
| Scientific payload |
19 kilograms |
| Launch |
August 2003 from Kourou, French Guiana on a shared Ariane-5 ride to geostationary-transfer orbit (GTO). |
| Orbit |
16-month transfer orbit from GTO to lunar orbit insertion, then polar elliptical operational orbit, ranging from 300 to 10 000 kilometres in altitude above the Moon. |
| Ground stations |
ESA network stations around the world, operating 8 hours twice a week. |
| Mission lifetime |
2 – 2.5 years |
| Prime contractor |
Swedish Space Corporation, Solna, Sweden |
Last update: 11 August 2006

 |  |  Related links

| | | Swedish Space Corporation (http://www.ssc.se/) |  |

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