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Coronavirus Pandemic Forces Mission Control Adjustments – Responsible for 21 Flying Spacecraft

Panorama of the Main Control Room at ESOC, ESA’s European Space Operations Centre, Darmstadt, Germany, taken in 2012. Credit: ESA/J. Mai, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

Responsible for spacecraft orbiting Earth, the Sun and exploring the Solar System, teams at ESA’s ESOC mission control deal with in-flight challenges every day, from faulty hardware, problematic software and hazardous space debris to computer viruses that could affect ground stations.

So how do they keep missions flying when a viral pandemic puts the people of the Agency at risk?

ESA Control Center Mission Teams

ESOC awaiting final countdown before launch of BepiColombo. Credit: Juergen Mai

The first priority is the health and well-being of the workforce across the Agency, while those working at ESA’s mission control center, in Darmstadt, Germany, have the unique challenge of maintaining missions in orbit and ensuring critical ground infrastructure functions as it should, including seven ground stations located on three continents.

Plans on the ground

ESA is currently flying 21 spacecraft from ESOC, ranging from Earth observation to astronomy and planetary exploration missions, as well as five Sentinel satellites belonging to the European Union’s Copernicus program.

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These missions do not fly by themselves. Engineers must take regular measures to, for example, protect spacecraft from gradually drifting off their intended orbits or colliding with debris, ensure solar panels are getting enough light from the Sun, operate the scientific instruments, receive bundles of crucial data and keep both onboard and ground systems working and up to date.

To deal with the coronavirus outbreak, ESA is implementing numerous preventative measures taking account of guidance provided by national and regional civil authorities, especially with respect to minimizing personal contact.

ESA Sentinel Control Room

Inside the Sentinel control room at ESA’s operation center in Darmstadt, Germany. Credit: ESA / J. Mai

For the mission operations teams or the experts in technical ground segment areas like flight dynamics and ground stations, work is typically done together in small-ish control rooms, and so a range of plans are in place to respond to the developing severity of the outbreak.

Responses differ primarily in the amount and type of personnel required on site in the control rooms and technical facilities.

Taking mission control home

For now, the aim at mission control remains maintaining the generation of mission data, and keeping the entire fleet of spacecraft, young and old, operating in a routine way.

At the same time the preparation and execution of ad-hoc critical activities, like collision avoidance maneuvers or the upcoming Earth flyby of BepiColombo, have to be ensured.

BepiColombo Earth Flyby

Artist’s impression of the BepiColombo spacecraft in cruise configuration, flying past Earth and with the Sun in the background. Credit: ESA/ATG medialab

As of Monday, March 16, the majority of the workforce at ESOC began working from home. Similar to staffing levels on a typical weekend, mission teams are now keeping a minimum presence on-site, while everyone who can is performing the maximum possible daily activities off site.

“In the history of ESA’s mission control center, there has never been a period with so few people on-site,” says Rolf Densing, Director of Operations for ESA.

“This, of course, has big implications for how missions are flown, and for the next few weeks, the priority will remain on protecting health by minimizing the number of people physically present, while ensuring effective daily operations”.

Integrals Orbits

ESA’s Integral space observatory has been orbiting Earth for 15 years, observing the ever-changing, powerful and violent cosmos in gamma rays, X-rays and visible light. Studying stars exploding as supernovas, monster black holes and, more recently, even gamma-rays that were associated with gravitational waves, Integral continues to broaden our understanding of the high-energy Universe. This image visualizes the orbits of the spacecraft since its launch on October 17, 2002, until October of 2017. ESA/ScienceOffice.org, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

In the future, if necessary, ESA could reduce on-site personnel even more, necessitating a reduction or even a halt to science data gathering so as to focus on simply maintaining spacecraft in safe, stable orbits. 

 “Such a scenario could be maintained for quite some time, extending into many weeks or months, if necessary,” says Paolo Ferri, Head of Mission Operations.

Source: SciTechDaily