ARCHIMEDES News: Magnetic Field Simulation Test Full Success
Dear Friends of Project ARCHIMEDES, on Friday, August 22, Miriam's Instrument Pod was successfully tested at IABG's Magnetic Field Simulation Facility near Munich, the largest of its kind in the world.
During the test, the pod's magnetic field properties were
determined, as well as the necessary offsets for its on-board
magnetometer experiment. During the test, the pod operated in flight
mode uninterrupted for several hours, versus a mission life time of
only 15 minutes. Therefore, the test automatically doubled as a
long-term operational stability test for the instrument pod, which
performed flawlessly as well.
Several modifications were made as a result of that test, mainly the
replacement of some steel screws with those made of brass where
stability allowed. A full demagnetization cycle was performed as
well.
However, breaking with the tradition of only successfully completing
tests so far, this time around a communication problem between the
groundstation's telemetry receiver and the telemetry computer was
discovered, to the effect that telemetry packages were correctly
received, but later some of them appeared corrupted with random
additional bytes when displayed. This problem is unrelated to the
magnetic field simulation test, and didn't corrupt the test itself, but
as of now is not understood and will have to be investigated in detail
before declaring flight readiness.
Next in line, the performance of MIRIAM's instrument pod during a
complete mission cycle will be tested, including a simulated launch and
detachment sequence. A long range life telemetry test out in the open
will round off the series of tests before the flight system will be
installed underneath the rocket's nose cone.
MIRIAM is a flight test within the ARCHIMEDES atmospheric sounding
probe for Mars project, and tests the full inflation and subsequent
entry of an atmospheric entry balloon ("ballute") here on Earth. It is
jointly developed by The Mars Society Germany and several institutes of
the University of the Federal Armed Forces of Germany in Munich. MIRIAM
combines all research programs within the ARCHIMEDES development
program, and is currently planned for launch to a 200km peak altitude
from the SSC ESRANGE rocket test site near Kiruna, North Sweden on top
of the REXUS4 sounding rocket managed and built by the DLR Moraba group
of Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany.
Launch is now planned for October 21, 2008.
To obtain more information please feel free to direct inquiries
to
either hg@marssociety.de or hannes.griebel@unibw.de.