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Feature

Proud space nerds making out-of-this-world contributions to research

19 August 2021
John Cater and Nick Rattenbury are working on aspects of space technology ranging from plasma propulsion to laser communications.

Growing up in the 1970s and ‘80s watching space shuttles blast off on TV, John Cater and  were children of the Space Age. In some ways they still are, as the giant Lego rocket in Rattenbury’s office attests.

These days, though, they do a lot more than scribble pictures of spaceships or watch the skies from their backyards.

As Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of ߣߣƵresearchers in engineering and physics respectively, the longtime friends are contributing to New Zealand’s space programme in several significant ways.

Cater is an associate professor of aerospace engineering and Rattenbury is a senior lecturer in astrophysics, but they work together on a range of research. With their wide network of national and international colleagues, students and industrial partners, they’re working on aspects of space technology ranging from plasma propulsion to laser communications.

John Cater and Nick Rattenbury working on cube satellite

Better spacecraft thermal protection

Since the Apollo mission days, spacecraft have been coated in heat-resistant ceramic tiles. However, these are heavy, fragile and often problematic.

With support from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, Cater, Rattenbury and their fellow principal investigator, Associate Professor  from Chemical and Materials Engineering, are developing more robust, reusable thermal protection systems for spacecraft using 3D-printed titanium alloys. 

Titanium is readily available in New Zealand. It’s strong, light, thermally insulating and resistant to sudden temperature changes. It can also be 3D printed, which means titanium structures can be shaped to maximise efficiency. 

“We can make it into complex shapes, aerodynamic shapes, make it thicker where it needs to be. We can even make it porous, filled with gas or fluid, where we need more thermal performance,” says Cater. 

Low mass is important in space, where additional launch weight means additional expense. Weight and strength are especially important for low-budget CubeSat satellites, which can be as small as 10 centimetres cubed. These satellites can contain valuable and sensitive biological payloads that researchers such as Sarah Kessans of the University of Canterbury do not want to see degrade upon re-entry to the Earth’s atmosphere.

Better spacecraft propulsion

Spacecraft launches involve combining and burning chemicals so the rocket takes off with a fiery explosion. Once a spacecraft is in orbit, though, a newer technology called electric propulsion can keep it going.

“Using power from solar panels, you energise a material, usually a noble gas such as xenon or krypton, to produce a plasma, which is then expelled in small amounts over a long period,” says Cater.

“This produces a thrust in an efficient way, which means you don’t have to carry so much fuel. The downside is that the instantaneous acceleration is small, but if you’ve already caught a ride on a chemical rocket and you’re up in space, these electric propulsion units become very useful, particularly for long missions.”

Cater and Rattenbury are focusing on better controlling the direction of the thrust coming from plasma propulsion. Well-steered propulsion could help enable extended space missions.

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John Cater

As such, the pair’s work has caught the interest of the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research, which is funding their research with PhD student Antonella Caldarelli and collaborators at the Australian National University.

“The idea is that the charged particles coming out of the thruster get accelerated by a magnetic nozzle,” says Cater.

“This has a magnetic field, which can be manipulated to act like a rudder. You can do that with solid-state electronics so there are no moving parts. In space, physical mechanisms create friction and vibration and are another way your spacecraft can fail.”

“As we’ve developed more sophisticated technologies in space, such as imaging and radar systems, we require greater fidelity and security in our communications. We’re reaching a limit to what can be done with radio frequencies, because there’s only a certain amount of bandwidth.”

Nicholas Rattenbury

Better space communications

When you think about space communications, do you imagine a lagging, crackling radio voice saying, “Houston, we have a problem”? No real-life astronaut ever said that but the lagging, crackling radio is real. 

“As we’ve developed more sophisticated technologies in space, such as imaging and radar systems, we require greater fidelity and security in our communications,” says Rattenbury. “We’re reaching a limit to what can be done with radio frequencies, because there’s only a certain amount of bandwidth, and if you have more data, it takes longer to download that data.”

The solution? To change the wavelength. Like radio waves, laser radiation is part of the electromagnetic spectrum. As anyone who has ever used a CD or DVD can attest, large amounts of information can be transmitted via laser. 

Some satellites are already in contact with each other through laser communication. The next step is to develop more reliable technologies so lasers can be used to communicate with the Earth. Rattenbury and Cater are working with global partners on developing telescopes that can pick up laser signals the way radio dishes pick up radio signals. 

“What we’re contemplating is developing a network of telescopes across Australia and New Zealand, which would provide the ground link services to satellite users who want to communicate their data using laser light,” says Rattenbury. 

As a future step, the pair are looking into extending the network of telescopes into Antarctica, because many satellites frequently pass over the polar regions. 

Super-secure communications

Laser communications between satellites and Earth could also have another benefit: super-secure encrypted communications around the world.

Rattenbury and Cater are working with Jevon Longdell of the University of Otago, who has developed quantum memory, which is able to hold a quantum state for long periods. This makes it possible to create encrypted communications using a quantum-entangled laser beam. Quantum cryptography is virtually unbreakable because any attempt to intercept the signal is detectable. 

“With laser communications, you can encrypt it with a quantum state and know for certain whether your data has been interfered with,” says Rattenbury.

“To make the system work, we’d need to have quantum memory in space,” says Cater. “Nick’s working on collecting the photons and my part of it is the systems that would keep a quantum memory operating in orbit.”

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Nick Rattenbury

More projects

Cater and Rattenbury have plans for even more space-related projects.

One idea is to use carbon fibre-reinforced polymer parts in space to take advantage of the light weight and unusual properties of the material.

Another idea involves synthetic aperture radar, which can penetrate cloud and smoke. Cater, Rattenbury and  of the Department of Electrical, Computer, and Software Engineering are looking at using the technology on small satellites for purposes ranging from spotting ships – maritime surveillance – to detecting tectonic movements on land.

The physicist and engineer are also collaborating on space projects led by others and guiding students who have ideas of their own. UniServices has been supporting them for years by helping prepare proposals for funding, hammer out contract details and draft intellectual property agreements. Some of Rattenbury and Cater’s students have also received support in areas such as patenting ideas and starting spinout companies. New Zealand has a lot to offer the international space sector, both in terms of geography and talent, they say.

But ultimately, what drives their work in space?

“It’s cool,” says Cater. The two friends laugh and for a moment they sound like boys again.

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