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The first bipropellant propulsion system produced at the Lampoldshausen Centre was developed for Symphonie, a joint German-French experimental direct broadcasting telecommunications satellite. Symphonie was a 3-axis, spin stabilised geostationary satellite that provided the transmission of television and radio programmes, telephone, fax and data. Two Symphonie satellites were launched from Cape Canaveral by Thor Delta. Symphonie 'A' was launched in 1974 and Symphonie 'B' in 1975. Although the design life of Symphonie was five years, both satellites could be operated for ten years. At the end of their mission, the two satellites were successfully de-orbited into a graveyard orbit using the remaining propellant of the attitude control system. Unlike today's modern satellite propulsion systems, Symphonie had three different propulsion systems. One for apogee injection, one for orbit control and one for attitude control.
Unified Propulsion Systems The 'unified' term is attributed to the simple and efficient use of a common propellant tank system that feeds the apogee motor, as well as all of the attitude and orbit control thrusters. The unified satellite propulsion system is therefore compact, more flexible, relatively lightweight and enables maximum possible use of the available propellants. Today, Unified propulsion systems produced at Astrium Lampoldshausen have become a standard for international satellite and spacecraft manufacturers throughout the world.
The First Orbital Satellite UPS The two TV-Sat's, in combination with two TDF satellites, was a joint German-French collaboration that set the foundations for direct European TV broadcasting.
The First Interplanetary Spacecraft UPS
The first unified propulsion system used on an interplanetary spacecraft was for the Galileo Retro-Propulsion Module. Galileo was launched by the US Space Shuttle 'Atlantis', in 1989 and was used for exploring Jupiter and its moons Ganymede, Callisto, Io and Europa. The Retro-Propulsion Module comprised a 400 N engine and twelve 10 N thrusters that controlled Galileo's six year journey to Jupiter. After orbiting Jupiter for two years, it then steered Galileo to within 400 km of the Jovian moons. The Galileo propulsion system performed flawlessly throughout its 14-year mission, which covered just over 4.6 billion kilometres. On 21st September 2003, the Galileo spacecraft was steered toward Jupiter for a planned disintegration and burn-up in the planet's dense atmosphere.
Unified Propulsion System - Tanks and Thrusters Details of apogee motors and thrusters, used on unified propulsion systems, can be found in the section on Bipropellant Thrusters.
Unified Propulsion System - Integration Flow The overall integration flow of the propulsion system, showing the tasks performed at Lampoldshausen and the customer facilities, is shown in the chart, right.
Unified Propulsion System - Modules The modular elements of a typical unified propulsion system are shown below:
Pressure Control Assembly - Module Components
Propellant Isolation Assembly - Module components
Customarily, UPS modules are delivered to the customer facilities for integration to the spacecraft. Some customers however, prefer this work to be performed at the Lampoldshausen Centre, which provides all of the necessary facilities and expertise. In these cases, the complete propulsion Assembly, Integration and Testing is performed on the spacecraft structure which is delivered in advance to the Lampoldshausen Centre.
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