The RBSP (Radiation Belt Storm Probes) Mission, part
of NASA's Living With a Star program, will provide unprecedented insight into the physical
dynamics of the radiation belts and give scientists the data they need to make predictions
of changes in this critical region of space.
After launch in 2012, two spacecraft will orbit the Earth, sampling the harsh radiation
belt environment where major space weather activity occurs and many spacecraft operate.
The mission was originally baselined for a Delta-7925
launch from Cape Canaveral, but an Atlas-5(401) launch vehicle was selected.
The two spacecraft will measure the particles, magnetic and electric fields, and waves
that fill geospace. Only with two spacecraft taking identical measurements and following
the same path, can scientists begin to understand how the belts change in both space and
time.
The RBSP spacecraft will carry a number of instruments and instrument suites to support
five experiments that will address the mission's science objectives. Because it is vital
that the two craft make identical measurements to observe changes in the radiation belts
through both space and time, each probe will carry the following instruments:
- Energetic Particle, Composition, and Thermal Plasma Suite (ECT)
- Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science (EMFISIS)
- Electric Field and Waves Suite (EFW)
- Radiation Belt Storm Probes Ion Composition Experiment (RBSPICE)
- Relativistic Proton Spectrometer (RPS)
The RBSP propulsion subsystem is a monopropellant hydrazine system that provides orbit maintenance, spin-rate adjustments, and changes in velocity for each spacecraft. The propulsion system consists of eight 0.9 Newton Aerojet MR-103G thrusters. The propellant and pressurant are stored in the three identical tanks, which are spaced equally around the spacecraft spin
axes.
In November 2012 the two RBSP probes were renamed Van Allen Probes.
One of the probes was shut down in late July 2019, the second was shut down in September 2019.