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The Roll Out Solar Array (ROSA) and its larger version ISS Roll Out Solar Array (iROSA) are lightweight, flexible power sources for spacecraft designed and developed by Redwire. This new type of solar array provides much more energy than traditional solar arrays at much less mass. Traditional solar panels used to power satellites are bulky, with heavy panels folded together using mechanical hinges. Given a space-bound payload is limited in its mass and volume by necessity, ROSA is 20 percent lighter (with a mass of ) and one-fourth the volume of rigid panel arrays with the same performance. ROSA is a flexible and rollable solar array that operates the same way a measuring tape unwinds on its spool. The new solar array design rolls up to form a compact cylinder for launch with significantly less mass and volume, potentially offering substantial cost savings as well as an increase in power for satellites. ROSA has a center wing made of a flexible material which support the strings of
photovoltaic Photovoltaics (PV) is the conversion of light into electricity using semiconducting materials that exhibit the photovoltaic effect, a phenomenon studied in physics, photochemistry, and electrochemistry. The photovoltaic effect is commercially us ...
cells that produce electricity. Both the sides of the wing have a narrow arm that extends through the length of the wing to provide support to the array, called a high strain composite boom. The booms look like split tubes made of a stiff
composite material A composite material (also called a composition material or shortened to composite, which is the common name) is a material which is produced from two or more constituent materials. These constituent materials have notably dissimilar chemical or ...
, flattened and rolled up lengthwise. The array does not need any motor to unfurl. This is achieved using the potential energy stored in the booms that is released as each boom transitions from a coil shape to a straight support arm. The solar wings are then deployed due to strain energy in rolled booms that are present at the two ends of the structure.


Patent

Brian R. Spence and Stephen F. White were the first persons to patent the idea of the Roll Out Solar Array on January 21, 2010. They received a patent for this work on April 1, 2014.


History


ROSA test mission

ISS roll out solar arrays being made in the Space Station Processing Facility at KSC NASA tested the ROSA technology in vacuum chambers on Earth throughout the 2010s and satisfied by the promising results commenced to test it in space on June 18 of 2017. ROSA launched aboard
SpaceX CRS-11 SpaceX CRS-11, also known as SpX-11, was a Commercial Resupply Service mission to the International Space Station, launched successfully on 3 June 2017. The mission was contracted by NASA and was flown by SpaceX. The mission utilized a Falcon 9 ...
on 3 June. Over the weekend of June 17–18, 2017, engineers on the ground remotely operated the
International Space Station The International Space Station (ISS) is the largest Modular design, modular space station currently in low Earth orbit. It is a multinational collaborative project involving five participating space agencies: NASA (United States), Roscosmos ( ...
's robotic Canadarm2 to extract the Roll Out Solar Array (ROSA) experiment from the SpaceX Dragon resupply ship. After the observation the mechanism was not planned to be retrieved back to earth. The solar array unfurled June 18, extending by tensioning booms on both sides of the 1.6-meter-wide wing. NASA decided to conduct continuous tests for a week and observe its consequences. Engineers observed the behavior of the solar array as it was exposed to extreme temperature swings through the ISS's orbit. Vibrations and oscillations were also mechanically introduced to assess the array's response to structural loads. Subsequent to the experiments, ground controllers were unable to lock the solar panel in its stowed configuration. The solar array was therefore jettisoned from the International Space Station on June 30, following the 12-day test.


iROSA 2B/4B

In June 2021, two new solar iROSA panels were installed on the International Space Station's P6 truss mast cans. The two operations took six hours each to complete and were carried out on three spacewalks by astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Thomas Pesquet. The new arrays were intended to give the station a total of 120 kilowatts of additional augmented power during daytime orbit.


iROSA 3A/4A

In December 2022, Expedition 68 crew members Josh Cassada and Frank Rubio installed an iROSA at Array 3A on the S4 truss segment and connected it to the US power system. The spacewalkers undid bolts and installed cables and at 17:37 GMT the array was deployed and is receiving power. As part of get-ahead tasks, they prepared the 4A array on the P4 truss segment for the next spacewalk, demated the 1B array on the S6 segment, broke torque on the P4 electronics boxes, and installed cables along the truss to be mated at the end of the fifth spacewalk of the expedition. The spacewalk faced a delay when Cassada's suit did not power up. Troubleshooting steps were carried out and power was restored to Cassada's suit so they could continue the spacewalk.
Nick Hague Tyler Nicklaus Hague (born on September 24, 1975) is a United States Space Force colonel and a NASA astronaut of the class of 2013. Selected to be a flight engineer on the International Space Station, his first launch was on Soyuz MS-10, which ...
was ground support communicator for the spacewalk. On 22 December 2022, during Cassada and Rubio's next spacewalk, the other iROSA was installed on top of the old 4A solar array.


Applications

Over time, the photovoltaic cells on the ISS' existing Solar Array Wings on the Integrated Truss Structure have degraded gradually, having been designed for a 15-year service life. This is especially noticeable with the first arrays to launch, with the P6 and P4 Trusses in 2000 and 2006. To augment the wings, three pairs of scaled-up versions known as iROSA are planned by NASA to launch in the trunk of the SpaceX Dragon 2 cargo spacecraft from early June 2021 to early 2023, aboard SpaceX CRS-22,
CRS-26 SpaceX CRS-26, also known as SpX-26, is a Commercial Resupply Service mission to the International Space Station (ISS) launched on 26 November 2022. The mission is contracted by NASA and is flown by SpaceX using a . This is the sixth flight fo ...
, and CRS-28. These arrays, half the width of the existing wings, are intended to be deployed along the central part of the wings between half and two-thirds of their length, and their planes are canted at a 10° angle above the plane of the existing solar array wings. Work to install iROSA's support brackets on the P6 truss mast cans holding the Solar Array Wings was initiated by the crew members of Expedition 64 in late February 2021. After the first pair of arrays were delivered in early June, a spacewalk on 16 June by members Shane Kimbrough and Thomas Pesquet of Expedition 65 to place one iROSA array on the 2B power channel and mast can of the P6 truss was successful until a spacesuit computer malfunctioned and the iROSA encountered technical problems with deployment, resulting in the spacewalk being cut short early, having lasted 7 hours and 15 minutes. Two more spacewalks, on 20 and 25 June and lasting between 6 hours 28 minutes and 6 hours 45 minutes, saw Kimbrough and Pesquet complete the first iROSA's deployment as well as the installation and deployment of the second iROSA on the 4B power channel and mast can. The next pair of iROSA assemblies are due to be installed with one of them on the P4 Truss. Astronauts
Akihiko Hoshide is a Japanese engineer, JAXA astronaut, and former Commander of the International Space Station. On August 30, 2012, Hoshide became the third Japanese astronaut to walk in space. Early life and education He was born in 1968 in Tokyo, Japan. H ...
and Mark Vande Hei of Expedition 65 were slated to carry out the preceding bracket installation on 24 August 2021. It was postponed to September after Vande Hei encountered "minor medical issues". He was replaced by Thomas Pesquet. The spacewalk began on 12 September 2021 and lasted 6 hours and 45 minutes. The next pair of arrays were launched aboard SpaceX CRS-26 on 26 November 2022. On 3 December 2022, Expedition 68 crew members Josh Cassada and Frank Rubio began a spacewalk to install the arrays at their final locations, at the 3A power channel and mast can on the S4 segment, and the 4A power channel and mast can on the P4 segment. They completed the installation on 22 December. The Power and Propulsion Element of the Lunar Gateway and Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission will use ROSA technology to power its solar electric propulsion. The ROSA on DART will enable the spacecraft to navigate through space and reach the Didymos asteroid system. The flexible and rollable modular wings are lighter, more compact and stiffer in space and smaller than iROSA. Each array will slowly unfurl to reach 28 feet (8.53 m) in length. DART will be the first probe to fly the new arrays, paving the way for their use on future missions. Redwire delivered ROSA to APL in May 2021 and worked closely with the APL team for some weeks to carefully install them onto the spacecraft. The installation was completed on 13 August 2021. A small portion of each DART solar array is configured to demonstrate Transformational Solar Array technology, which has very-high-efficiency SolAero Inverted Metamorphic (IMM) solar cells and reflective concentrators providing three times more power than current solar array technology.


Missions

CRS-11 SpaceX CRS-11, also known as SpX-11, was a Commercial Resupply Service mission to the International Space Station, launched successfully on 3 June 2017. The mission was contracted by NASA and was flown by SpaceX. The mission utilized a Falcon 9 ...
File:SpaceX_CRS-11_Patch.png, SpaceX CRS-11 mission patch
CRS-22 SpaceX CRS-22, also known as SpX-22, was a Commercial Resupply Services (CRS) mission to the International Space Station (ISS) that launched at 17:29:15 UTC on 3 June 2021. The mission is contracted by NASA and is flown by SpaceX using a Carg ...
File:SpaceX CRS-22 Patch.png, SpaceX CRS-22 Patch File:Spacewalk emblem iROSA 2B 4B.png, ISS iROSA 2B and 4B patch mission patch Double Asteroid Redirection Test File:DART Mission Patch.png, Dart Mission patch File:Behind the Scenes Inspecting DART's Roll Out Solar Array ROSA Technology.webm, DART's Roll Out Solar Array (ROSA) development File:Rosa for Dart Mission.jpg, ROSA ready to be installed on DART spacecraft File:Rosa installed on spacecraft.jpg, Roll-Out Solar Arrays (ROSA) being installed on DART
CRS-26 SpaceX CRS-26, also known as SpX-26, is a Commercial Resupply Service mission to the International Space Station (ISS) launched on 26 November 2022. The mission is contracted by NASA and is flown by SpaceX using a . This is the sixth flight fo ...
File:SpaceX_CRS-26_Patch.png, SpaceX CRS-26 mission patch


See also

*
Solar panels A solar cell panel, solar electric panel, photo-voltaic (PV) module, PV panel or solar panel is an assembly of photovoltaic solar cells mounted in a (usually rectangular) frame, and a neatly organised collection of PV panels is called a phot ...
* Solar array * Electrical system of the International Space Station * Redwire


References

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External links


Deployment of experimental solar array on ISSJettisoning of solar array from the ISSDeployment of operational solar array on ISS, June 25, 2021
{{DEFAULTSORT:Roll Out Solar Array NASA programs Solar energy Redwire Articles containing video clips International Space Station