Engineering:OSAM-1

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Short description: NASA Spacecraft

OSAM-1 (On-orbit Servicing, Assembly, and Manufacturing 1) is a NASA spacecraft designed to test on-orbit refilling of satellites. It was previously known as Restore-L.[1][2][3]

Originally planned for 2020,[4] its launch is currently planned for no earlier than 2026.[5] Its first objective would be the complex refueling of Landsat 7, an existing satellite launched in 1999. It would involve grasping the satellite with a mechanical arm, gaining access to the satellite's fuel tank by cutting through insulation and wires and unscrewing a bolt, and then attaching a hose to pump in hydrazine fuel. This would be the first refueling of a satellite in space, and a demonstration of the potential to repair the thousands of satellites in orbit and keep them in operation.[1] Because the satellites now in space were not designed to be serviced, there are significant challenges to doing so successfully.[1][2]

OSAM-1's second objective would be to deploy a separate robot called SPIDER (Space Infrastructure Dexterous Robot) to build a new structure in space. Using robots to build and assemble new structural components from scratch would be an important step towards a type of space-based construction that has been impossible to date.[1]

Description

The OSAM-1 spacecraft will include:

  • two arms to grapple the target satellite
  • the attached payload for SPIDER

History

In 2016, NASA's Restore-L satellite was intended to refuel Landsat 7.[4] In 2020 SPIDER was added and the name was changed from Restore-L to OSAM-1.

Progression

A subsequent mission, OSAM-2 will also have two robotic arms.[6] OSAM-2 will use ModuLink software which is based on xLink.[6]

See also

References