Press Release
MEGANE Instrument Test Model Goes to Japan for Physical Tests and Design Review
On Dec. 2, the 秘密直播 Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) team designing a gamma-ray and neutron spectrometer for the Japan-led Martian Moons eXploration (MMX) mission shipped a test model of their instrument to the Mitsubishi Electric Corporation (MELCO), which is building the MMX spacecraft for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). The delivery represents a major milestone in the instrument鈥檚 development, as it鈥檚 the first opportunity for the JAXA and APL teams to physically test how well the MEGANE instrumentation fits into the MMX spacecraft design.
The Mars-moon Exploration with GAmma rays and NEutrons instrument, or MEGANE (pronounced meh-gah-nay, meaning 鈥渆yeglasses鈥 in Japanese), is one of 14 instruments that will ride aboard MMX, a mission that aims to understand how Mars鈥 moons Phobos and Deimos were formed. MEGANE, which will 鈥渟ee鈥 Phobos鈥 elemental composition, plays a critical part in answering that question.
The MEGANE test model, called a structural thermal model (STM), is a simplified version of the actual instrument. It鈥檚 equipped with heaters to simulate the temperatures each of MEGANE鈥檚 components is expected to produce, and thermocouples to measure their temperatures.
From a technical standpoint, the STM will validate that the mechanical and thermal design of the MEGANE hardware meets the expectations of all design teams.
鈥淭his test model delivery is about minimizing any possible variables that could become issues during launch and the mission,鈥 said Spencer Disque, the engineering lead on the MEGANE STM. 鈥淚t gives the team a nice warm and fuzzy feeling that the math, modeling and simulation are right.鈥
Once attached to the MMX spacecraft with the STMs of the other 13 instruments, the model hardware will go through two tests: a thermal environment test to simulate the thermal conditions during the spacecraft鈥檚 time in space, and a vibration test to simulate the shakes and quakes expected during launch, which accelerometers provided in Japan will measure.
If there are unexpected results in either test, it may require modifications to the instrument design.
鈥淚t鈥檚 better to find discrepancies early than to experience unexpected behavior once we鈥檝e integrated the actual flight instrument,鈥 Disque noted.
The full set of tests is expected to be carried out sometime in the middle of 2021, depending on when the other spacecraft instruments arrive. 鈥淲e鈥檙e one of the first instruments to deliver and be integrated,鈥 said Brian Schratz, the MEGANE instrument systems engineer at APL. 鈥淭he tests will happen once all the hardware arrives and is integrated.鈥
MEGANE is being developed under NASA鈥檚 Discovery Program, which provides low-cost scientific space missions relevant to NASA鈥檚 Science Mission Directorate. To learn more about MEGANE, visit .