ACE Weekly 04/24/2013 - 04/30/2013 All ACE spacecraft subsystems are performing as expected. ======================================================================== Orbit/Attitude: Type Attitude Date 04/30/2013 DOY 120 2013 Thrusters 2R 4R+ 4R- Duration 9:35 min Start 14:29:53z Stop 14:39:18z HGAStart -7.77 deg HGAStop +8.78 deg SunStart 8.47 deg SunStop 11.78 deg SpinStart 5.0910 rpm SpinStop 5.0930 rpm Nutation 0.18 deg Firing 48 pulses FuelUsed 0.1522 lbm FuelRemain 114.6104 lbm FinalSCMass 1348.870 lbm The next attitude maneuver is scheduled for Tuesday 05/07/2013. ======================================================================== OCRs: None ======================================================================== Activities: Data Capture: 100% DOY 111-118 2013 Dog-Leg Maneuvers (background information) As ACE orbits the L1 point every 6 months, the relative position of the sun (and the sun-pulse) changes. The attitude maneuvers turn the spacecraft to the left throughout the solar orbit. To turn to the left, the time between the sun-pulse and the thruster fire is adjusted each week. But there is a region of the L1 orbit (bottom left corner as seen from Earth) where the sun-pulse and thruster firing would occur at the same time. When this occurs, the attitude maneuver is split into 2 segments (e.g. segment 1=turn left & up; segment 2=turn left & down). We have avoided dog-leg maneuvers since 2008, because the L1 orbit had elongated diagonally (upper left to bottom right as seen from Earth) and the spacecraft didn't spend much time in the "dog-leg corner" of the orbit. Another factor was that the time between maneuvers was maximized which allowed more time for the spacecraft to drift through the dog-leg corner. But as the L1 orbit opens up and we have weekly maneuvers, we will again face dog-leg maneuvers. Dog-leg maneuvers are more of an inconvenience and are not a significant impact to fuel usage. We have managed to skip a dog-leg this month, but we expect to execute one or more dog-leg maneuvers every 6-months starting Nov 2013. ACE uses the 2R 4R+ 4R- thrusters for attitude maneuvers. There are 3 opposing thrusters (1R 3R+ 3R-) that could be fired opposite the sun-pulse. However, using 1R causes significant nutation. After the first 2 weeks of the mission (Sep 1997), it was determined not to use 1R for attitude maneuvers. The 1R thruster has only been used for orbit shaping & z-axis maneuvers (1997, 1999-2001) and has not been used since. ======================================================================== Anomalies: None