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NASA Successfully Joins Sunshade to Roman Observatory's 'Exoskeleton'
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NASA Successfully Joins Sunshade to Roman Observatory's 'Exoskeleton'
by Ashley Balze for GSFC News
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Feb 16, 2025
NASA's Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope team has successfully integrated the mission's deployable aperture cover - a visor-like sunshade that will help prevent unwanted light from entering the telescope - to the outer barrel assembly, another structure designed to shield the telescope from stray light in addition to keeping it at a stable temperature.

"It's been incredible to see these major components go from computer models to building and now integrating them," said Sheri Thorn, an aerospace engineer working on Roman's sunshade at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "Since it's all coming together at Goddard, we get a front row seat to the process. We've seen it mature, kind of like watching a child grow up, and it's a really gratifying experience."

The sunshade functions like a heavy-duty version of blackout curtains you might use to keep your room extra dark. It will make Roman more sensitive to faint light from across the universe, helping astronomers see dimmer and farther objects. Made of two layers of reinforced thermal blankets, the sunshade is designed to remain folded during launch and deploy after Roman is in space. Three booms will spring upward when triggered electronically, raising the sunshade like a page in a pop-up book.

The sunshade blanket has an inner and outer layer separated by about an inch, much like a double-paned window. "We're prepared for micrometeoroid impacts that could occur in space, so the blanket is heavily fortified," said Brian Simpson, Roman's deployable aperture cover lead at NASA Goddard. "One layer is even reinforced with Kevlar, the same thing that lines bulletproof vests. By placing some space in between the layers we reduce the risk that light would leak in, because it's unlikely that the light would pass through both layers at the exact same points where the holes were."

Over the course of a few hours, technicians meticulously joined the sunshade to the outer barrel assembly - both Goddard-designed components - in the largest clean room at NASA Goddard. The outer barrel assembly will help keep the telescope at a stable temperature and, like the sunshade, help shield the telescope from stray light and micrometeoroid impacts. It's fitted with heaters to help ensure the telescope's mirrors won't experience wide temperature swings, which make materials expand and contract.

"Roman is made up of a lot of separate components that come together after years of design and fabrication," said Laurence Madison, a mechanical engineer at NASA Goddard. "The deployable aperture cover and outer barrel assembly were built at the same time, and up until the integration the two teams mainly used reference drawings to make sure everything would fit together as they should. So the successful integration was both a proud moment and a relief!"

Both the sunshade and outer barrel assembly have been extensively tested individually, but now that they're connected engineers are assessing them again. Following the integration, the team tested the sunshade deployment.

"Since the sunshade was designed to deploy in space, the system isn't actually strong enough to deploy itself in Earth's gravity," said Matthew Neuman, a mechanical engineer working on Roman's sunshade at NASA Goddard. "So we used a gravity negation system to offset its weight and verified that everything works as expected."

Next, the components will undergo thermal vacuum testing together to ensure they will function as planned in the temperature and pressure environment of space. Then they'll move to a shake test to assess their performance during the extreme vibrations they'll experience during launch.

Technicians will join Roman's solar panels to the outer barrel assembly and sunshade this spring, and then integrate them with the rest of the observatory by the end of the year.

The mission has now passed a milestone called Key Decision Point-D, marking the official transition from the fabrication stage that culminated in the delivery of major components to the phase involving assembly, integration, testing, and launch. The Roman observatory remains on track for completion by fall 2026 and launch no later than May 2027.

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