Abstract

Suborbital flight experiments, carried out through sounding rockets, have been employed for scientific and technological research since the beginning of the space age, in the late 1950s. In Brazil, sounding rocket campaigns have been carried out since 1965, when the Centro de Lançamento Barreira do Inferno (CLBI) began its operation, having the Instituto de Aeronáutica e Espaço (IAE) as the primary provider of vehicles. IAE has also provided vehicles for international programs, such as the TEXUS and MASER microgravity programs, implemented by the European Space Agency (ESA), with launching campaigns based in the European territory. To implement each Brazilian mission that uses IAE’s sounding rockets, a set of activities focused on mission objectives is planned and implemented. Although structured and executed quite similarly to a project, such sounding rocket campaigns do not have their complete life-cycle studied and formally described in phases, review meetings, management processes and verification and validation philosophy. In the present work, the attempt has been to characterize a sounding rocket mission as a project and then, based on European Cooperation for Space Standardization (ECSS) standards, propose a reduced life-cycle to develop such projects, tailored to meet Brazilian sounding rocket missions. The proposed life-cycle, adapted to Brazilian sounding rocket missions, is then compared with two other sounding rocket campaigns life-cycles: one from the European Programme for Life and Physical Sciences in Space and the other from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) sounding rocket program. The study and availability of a framework for implementing and managing sounding rocket missions will improve the reliability of such endeavors and speed up their organization.

Highlights

  • There has been a long-standing effort by the Brazilian government to develop space vehicles, mainly sounding rockets, aiming to provide access to outer space for scientific and technological experiments.The development of space vehicles in Brazil has been carried out by the Instituto de Aeronáutica e Espaço (IAE)

  • Note that the primary purpose of this paper is to provide a tailoring of the European Cooperation for Space Standardization (ECSS) standard to sounding rocket missions concerning system engineering and project management

  • The proposal given here has been formulated taking as a reference the Brazilian Microgravity Program (BMP), sponsored by Agência Espacial Brasileira (AEB), with sounding rocket campaigns executed from two launching sites: the Centro de Lançamento Barreira do Inferno (CLBI), located in Rio Grande do Norte, and the Centro de Lançamento Alcântara (CLA), situated in Maranhão

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Summary

Introduction

There has been a long-standing effort by the Brazilian government to develop space vehicles, mainly sounding rockets, aiming to provide access to outer space for scientific and technological experiments. The development of space vehicles in Brazil has been carried out by the Instituto de Aeronáutica e Espaço (IAE). The IAE has developed a successful series of sounding rocket vehicles (Garcia et al 2011), which have been extensively used by both Brazilian and international scientific programs, having the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE), the European Space Agency (ESA) and, lately, Brazilian universities as primary customers. Received: Mar. 19 2020 | Accepted: Oct.13 2020. Peer Review History: Double Blind Peer Review.

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