Launch After final system end-to-end and environmental testing, the RemoveDebris spacecraft was shipped to
Nanoracks in Houston and then onto the launch site at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida. The spacecraft was placed in an ISS cargo transfer bag and placed in the pressurised section of the CRS-14
SpaceX Dragon 1 spacecraft. The Dragon resupply mission with RemoveDEBRIS onboard was launched 2 April 2018, arriving at the
ISS on 4 April. The RemoveDebris spacecraft was unloaded from the capsule. NASA Astronauts Drew Feustel and Ricky Arnold removed the platform handling panels, completed final preparation and loaded the satellite into the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM) airlock on 6 June 2018. An airlock cycle was performed on 19 June 2018 and RemoveDEBRIS moved outside the JEM via the airlock slide table. The spacecraft was grasped by the Kaber interface on the Mobile Servicing System Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator (MSS SPDM) and placed in the deployment position.
Deployment Deployment of the satellite from the station's
Kibo module via robotic
Canadarm-2 took place on 20 June 2018. At approximately 100 kg, RemoveDEBRIS was the largest satellite to have ever been deployed from the ISS. The platform contained two CubeSat deployers from
ISISPACE. The full lifespan of the mission from launch to re-entry was estimated at 1.5 years.
Net experiment On 16 September 2018, it demonstrated its ability to use a net to capture a deployed simulated target.
VBN experiment On 28 October 2018, DebrisSat 2 was deployed at 06:15UTC. The VBN camera on the platform took 361 images of the spacecraft crucial to determining the performance of the camera system. Position and attitude data from DebrisSat 2 was transmitted back to the platform providing
ground truth for the experiment. DebrisSat 2 also forwarded low resolution photos of the deployment to the platform from its own vantage point.
Dragsail experiment The deployment of the dragsail was targeted for 4 March 2019. After the deploy command had been sent, no expected changes in spacecraft behaviour were detected. After an investigation it was determined that the most likely result was a partial or failed deployment of the inflatable boom which prevented the sail from deploying. Lessons learnt from this attempt were put into practice for two new dragsails that were deployed on the Spaceflight
SSO-A mission. ==See also==