JUICE radar antenna tested in helicopter flight campaign
Radar for Icy Moon Exploration instrument RIME will be the first to look below
the surface of the Jupiter moons Europa, Ganymede and Callisto
Friedrichshafen, 26/09/2017 - JUICE, the Europe Space Agency´s deep space mission to the
icy moons of Jupiter led by Airbus, has taken off for the first time with the testing of the RIME
instrument (RIME - Radar for Icy Moon Exploration) flying beneath a helicopter.
At an airfield 30 kilometres northwest of Airbus’ Friedrichshafen plant in Germany, the 16.6
metre antenna of the RIME instrument was tested in various flight configurations during a two
day campaign. In June 2022, the 5.5 ton spacecraft JUICE (JUpiter ICy moons Explorer) will
set off on its nearly 600 million-kilometre-long journey to Jupiter, where it is expected to
arrive in late 2029.
For three and a half years, JUICE will sweep around the giant planet, exploring its turbulent
atmosphere, enormous magnetosphere, and tenuous set of dark rings, as well as studying its
three largest icy moons - Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. The goal is to investigate whether
there are liquid oceans under these icy crusts which might harbour potentially habitable
environments.
Once the spacecraft enters Jupiter’s gravitational field, the first two and a half years will be
spent making about 30 observation overflights of the three moons, examining their interior,
surface, tenuous atmosphere and magnetic interactions. The last year will be spent in orbit
around Ganymede to observe this moon in much greater detail.
The spacecraft will carry 10 state-of-the-art instruments, including cameras, spectrometers,
an ice-penetrating radar, an altimeter, radio-science experiment, and sensors to monitor the
magnetic fields and charged particles in the Jovian system.
RIME, the radar sounder instrument, is optimized for penetrating below the Galilean icy
moons’ surfaces, up to a depth of 9 km. It will provide images with a resolution of around 1
km x 10 km and 50 m in depth. RIME will work at a central frequency of 9 MHz and will use a
16.6 m dipole antenna. The two antenna booms with a diameter of 4 cm are made of CFRP
(Carbon fiber reinforced polymer) and have a mass of about 1300 g.
The nadir, or downward looking radar transmits radio waves which travel through the
subsurface where they interact with any layers and structures with different dielectric
constants. The varying reflections are detected onboard via the same antenna and used to
create a depth image (radargram) of the subsurface. RIME is unique as it is the first
instrument to be deployed to Jupiter and the outer Solar System capable of performing direct
subsurface measurements.
The RIME tests enabled Airbus engineers to verify the results of computer simulations, and
measure the radio performance of the RIME antenna as if it was mounted on a spacecraft.
These characteristics are strongly impacted by the electromagnetic coupling to spacecraft
surfaces and have to be measured to ensure calibration of the antenna.
Due to the required frequency range such tests have to be performed outdoors and are
constrained by external disturbances, electromagnetic reflections and the general weather
conditions. As the real spacecraft cannot be taken outside, a specific mock-up measuring 3
m x 2 m x 2 m has been built on which the antenna is mounted. To minimise any external
coupling the antenna can be rotated vertically. The mock-up was flown hanging on a
polyethylene rope roughly 120 m below a helicopter and 320 m above the ground. All test
equipment was integrated in the mock-up and operated via remote control from the ground.
To withstand the helicopter tests, and to protect against possible wind loads the fragile,
space designed, antenna booms were "stiffened" for the test flights with fiberglass (GFRP)
tubes.
Airbus is prime contractor for the JUICE spacecraft, building on the expertise developed on
its sites in Toulouse (France), Friedrichshafen (Germany), Stevenage (UK) and Madrid
(Spain). Airbus has around 150 space engineers on JUICE and leads an industry consortium
of more than 60 companies.
Juice Photo link :
Juice video link:
About Airbus
Airbus is a global leader in aeronautics, space and related services. In 2016, it generated revenues of € 67 billion
and employed a workforce of around 134,000. Airbus offers the most comprehensive range of passenger airliners
from 100 to more than 600 seats. Airbus is also a European leader providing tanker, combat, transport and
mission aircraft, and is one of the world’s leading space companies. In helicopters, Airbus provides the most
efficient civil and military rotorcraft solutions worldwide.
Your contact
Mathias Pikelj
Communications - Airbus Defence & Space
Francisco Lechón
External Communications - Airbus Space Systems, Spain
Jeremy Close
AIRBUS | Defence and Space
Guilhem Boltz
AIRBUS | Defence and Space