Relocatable 10 kW Solar Array for Lunar South Pole Missions

2021 
Deployable, relocatable, free-standing solar arrays are being developed to provide modular power for future lunar South Pole missions. Major design requirements for these arrays will be low mass, compact launch stowage, and highly reliable deployment and retraction. This paper presents a novel conceptual design for a10 kW solar array to address these requirements referred to as the Relocatable Solar Array (RSA).Simply stated, the concept is a pair of solar cell blankets freely hanging from a horizontal cross arm supported by a vertical, slender, telescoping mast resting on a deployable tripod base. A major factor in simplifying the design is that the force exerted by lunar gravity is used to deploy and maintain extension of the hanging array blankets. A second major factor in achieving the desired low mass and high volumetric efficiency is that the array operates in the vacuum, low-gravity, lunar environment with no deployed vibration frequency requirement. Such a low-load environment enables use of extraordinarily slender and low mass structural members to support the hanging array blankets. This concept was developed, in part, to serve as a NASA reference solar array concept against which other proposed arrays can be compared.
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