Satellite Solar Panel Degradation Calculator

Stephanie Ben-Joseph headshot Stephanie Ben-Joseph

Overview

Satellites depend on solar arrays to convert sunlight into electrical power for avionics, communications, payloads, and thermal control. Unlike terrestrial systems, space arrays must operate for years without servicing while exposed to radiation, vacuum, and repeated hot/cold transitions. As a result, designers usually work with beginning-of-life (BOL) and end-of-life (EOL) power and include margin to ensure the spacecraft can meet power needs late in the mission.

This calculator provides a simplified estimate of remaining array power versus mission duration using an exponential degradation model. It combines (1) a baseline cell/array aging term, (2) a radiation-related term scaled by an annual dose proxy (krad/year), and (3) a thermal-cycling term scaled by temperature swing amplitude (°C). The intent is screening-level planning and trade studies, not flight certification.

Inputs (what they mean)

Model and formulas

We model remaining power as an exponential decay from the initial value:

P(t) = P0 e -kt

Where:

The combined coefficient is the sum of three components:

k = kc + kr + kt

Using the simplified linear scaling embedded in this calculator:

So the total becomes:

k = (c/100) + 0.0008·F + 0.0001·A

with c in %/year, F in krad/year, and A in °C.

Derived outputs

How to interpret the results

The output is an estimate of average electrical power capability at the end of the mission relative to the initial power you entered. Use it as a first-pass EOL factor for:

If the calculator predicts a low percent remaining, typical mitigations include increasing array area, improving shielding/cover glass, selecting more radiation-tolerant cell technology, or revisiting operational temperature extremes.

Worked example

Suppose:

Compute the coefficient:

Remaining power:

P(5) = 5000 · e−0.021·5 ≈ 5000 · e−0.105 ≈ 4500 W (approx.)

Percent remaining is about 90%, meaning total degradation over the mission is about 10% under these simplified assumptions.

Comparison: how different assumptions change EOL power

The table below illustrates directional effects (holding P0 and mission duration fixed). Your actual environment and hardware can produce different sensitivities.

Scenario Radiation (krad/yr) Thermal amplitude (°C) Baseline coeff (%/yr) Expected EOL trend
Lower radiation Low Same Same Higher remaining power
Higher thermal swings Same High Same Lower remaining power
More conservative aging Same Same High Lower remaining power
Shorter mission Same Same Same Higher remaining power

Assumptions & limitations

Enter parameters to estimate remaining power.

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