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RITA Ion Thruster
Ion Propulsion
How it Works
Advantages
Applications
Heritage
Thruster RIT-10
Thruster RIT-XT
Thruster RIT-22
Xenon Regulator
Eureca
Artemis
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Radiofrequency Ion Thruster, Model RIT-10.
High performance space qualified ion thrusters for commercial, scientific, deep space and interplanetary missions.
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The space qualified RITA-10 Radio frequency ion propulsion system has
an operating life in excess of 20,000 hours and a nominal specific impulse
of 3058 seconds.
RITA-10 is a complete ion propulsion system that enables:
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85% less propellant mass than chemical bipropellant
thrusters. |
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50% less propellant mass than competing ion
propulsion systems. |
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RIT-10
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Advantages:
RITA-10 performance provides the following large scale advantages:
More payload,
or
Reduced launch
cost, or
Longer mission
life, or
Combinations of
the above.
The magnitude of propellant saving is shown in the example below:
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RITA Propellant Saving
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Example: 4100 kg spacecraft, GEO, 15 year life.
Propellant consumption for N/S station keeping.

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Applications:
RITA is especially suitable for:
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Stationkeeping. |
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Attitude Control. |
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Orbit transfer between LEO, MEO and GEO. |
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Deep space trajectories and interplanetary missions. |
| Radio
frequency Ion Thruster: Model RIT 10 |
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| Heritage:
RITA- 10 Radio Frequency Ion Propulsion System |
RITA-10 Eureca
RITA 10 was first verified in space aboard the European Retrievable
Carrier ( Eureca), launched by the Space
Shuttle Atlantis in July 1992.
One year later, Eureca was returned to Earth by the Space Shuttle
Endeavour in July 1993.

Beam diameter: 87 mm.
 Thrust level:
5 mN - 10 mN
 240 hours
operation in space.
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- Flawless operation.
- Performance in agreement with ground test results and predictions.
- Verification of no EMC interference between satellite, payload or
electronics
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RITA-10 Artemis
RITA was used on the Advanced Relay Technology Mission satellite
(Artemis) as an experiment for
controlling perpendicular drift to the orbital plane and launched aboard
Ariane 5 on 12th July 2001.
Due to an upper stage malfunction, Artemis was injected into a low
elliptical orbit having an apogee of just 17,487 km, instead of the
targeted geostaionary transfer orbit of 35,853 km.
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Together with onboard
chemical propulsion, RITA-10 was reconfigured and successfully raised
Artemis into its operational Geostationary orbit.
During the Artemis rescue mission, the RITA-10 system performed flawlessly
for 7,500 hours with 6,427 hours of operation on a single thruster,
equivalent to 7 years nominal mission operation and using just 14.2
kg of propellant.
Artemis reached GEO orbit in January 2003, after 11 months of RITA-10
operation.
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Based on the success of RITA-10, further ion thruster evolution and technological
advances have been made to achieve the advanced RIT-XT
and RITA-22, yielding even greater performance. |
Contact for Further Information
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If
you require more detailed information on any of our products or services,
then please contact
us, indicating your particular areas of interest or intended application.
Your enquiry will receive our best attention.
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