4 research outputs found

    Spacecraft materials: Comparison between flight results obtained on LDEF and MIR

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    Two flight experiments dedicated to the study of the performance of materials in space have been carried out. Material samples have been exposed passively to low-Earth orbit (LEO) environment, then retrieved for laboratory study. The first experiment was conducted in the framework of the FRECOPA project and was flown on the trailing edge of the Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) (exposure to vacuum and ultraviolet (UV) radiation for 5.5 years). The experiment COMES was installed outside of the MIR space station during an extravehicular activity; it was exposed to vacuum, O-atoms, and UV radiation for 1.1 year; and it was brought back to Earth by cosmonauts. The difference in exposure conditions and the use of transparent filters protecting some samples of COMES enable to differentiate the effects of UV radiation and oxygen atoms. The degradations of several thermal control coatings (paints, metalized polymeric films with and without ITO), structural materials, and optical components have been observed, measured, and compared after these two flight experiments. This paper summarizes various 'lessons learned' that can be used to identify aspects of space aging, to orient future research in this field, and to assist in spacecraft design
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