Satellite Status
Cutaway diagram of ISO showing main components
Over the past few years, there have been a number of technical
problems with the satellite development which have caused a delay in
the launch date to September 1995. These have now been overcome and
testing of the flight model is well underway.
The main problem areas have been:
- Cryogenic Valves: The liquid-helium sub-system contains a number of
valves which need to operate over a temperature range from 350K down
to 2K and to be "tight" to superfluid liquid helium. The valves are
almost exclusively used during ground testing but there are some
mission-critical actuations during the powered part of the Ariane
flight. During the development phase, there were problems with
leakages through the valves. By a long process of re-design and
extensive test, these difficulties were overcome and flight-worthy
valves were integrated into the flight-model cryostat in autumn 1993.
- Contamination: During assembly and test, the optics of the
telescope became contaminated leading to a complete rebuild of the
flight model telescope with a new primary mirror.
- Straylight: It is required that the thermal self-emission
straylight from ISO reaching the IR detectors must be less than 10%
of the expected minimum astronomical background at all wavelengths.
Following concerns raised by the PI teams, there was an intensive
engineering effort to close all potential straylight paths to the
instrument enclosure. In February 1994, an extra test - the Dark
Background Test - was carried out to check the self-emission
straylight properties of ISO. For this test, the scientific
instruments were used and the ISO telescope was closed with a special
blinding plate at a temperature of 5K. From the results of these tests ISO
is expected to meet its self-emission straylight specifications at all
wavelengths.
The testing of the flight model service module has been
successfully completed and it is in storage awaiting the cryostat.
The flight-model scientific instruments and telescope have been
integrated with the flight model cryostat and tested. Following these
tests, the focal plane unit of ISOPHOT will be replaced. System-level
integration will start in ESTEC in June 1994 with the satellite
acceptance review foreseen for early 1995.
The industrial prime contractor for ISO is Aerospatiale, F. DASA. D, are
responsible for the payload module.