73,138 research outputs found

    Impact of shuttle environment on prelaunch handling of nickel-hydrogen batteries

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    Deployment of the American Satellite Company 1 spacecraft for the Space Shuttle Discovery in August 1985 set a new milestone in nickel-hydrogen battery technology. This communications satellite is equipped with two 35 Ah nickel-hydrogen batteries and it is the first such satellite launched into orbit via the Space Shuttle. The prelaunch activities, combined with the environmental constraints onboard the Shuttle, led to the development of a new battery handling procedure. An outline of the prelaunch activities, with particular attention to battery charging, is presented

    Accelerated and real-time geosynchronous life cycling test performance of nickel-hydrogen batteries

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    RCA Astro-Electronics currently has four nickel-hydrogen storage battery modules (11 cells each) on test in simulated geosynchronous life cycle regimes. These battery modules are of identical design to those used on the GSTAR (GTE Satellite Corp.) and Spacenet (GTE Spacenet Corp.) communications satellites. The batteries are being tested using an automated test station equipped with computer-controlled environmental chambers and recording equipment. The two battery types, 30 ampere-hours and 40 ampere-hours (GSTAR and Spacenet, respectively), are being electrically cycled using identical 44-day eclipse sequences at 5 C and vary with respect to depth of discharge, recharge ratio, duration of accumulated suntime, and the use of a reconditioning sequence. The test parameters are outlined and the preliminary test data and results are presented

    The mechanisms of temporal inference

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    The properties of a temporal language are determined by its constituent elements: the temporal objects which it can represent, the attributes of those objects, the relationships between them, the axioms which define the default relationships, and the rules which define the statements that can be formulated. The methods of inference which can be applied to a temporal language are derived in part from a small number of axioms which define the meaning of equality and order and how those relationships can be propagated. More complex inferences involve detailed analysis of the stated relationships. Perhaps the most challenging area of temporal inference is reasoning over disjunctive temporal constraints. Simple forms of disjunction do not sufficiently increase the expressive power of a language while unrestricted use of disjunction makes the analysis NP-hard. In many cases a set of disjunctive constraints can be converted to disjunctive normal form and familiar methods of inference can be applied to the conjunctive sub-expressions. This process itself is NP-hard but it is made more tractable by careful expansion of a tree-structured search space

    Subsonic Dynamic Testing of a Subscale ADEPT Entry Vehicle

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    The Adaptive Deployable Entry and Placement Technology (ADEPT) is a mechanically-deployed entry system. A sounding rocket test flight of an ADEPT vehicle, known as ADEPT SR-1, was conducted in September 2018. Prior to this sounding rocket test, an investigation was performed using the NASA Langley Research Center 20-ft Vertical Spin Tunnel (VST) to assess the free-flight dynamic characteristics of ADEPT SR-1 at subsonic speeds. The model of ADEPT SR-1 for this VST test was fabricated at 50-percent geometric scale, with dynamically scaled mass properties (Froude scaled) to represent full-scale flight at an altitude of 1.2 km above sea level. The subsonic dynamic characteristics of ADEPT SR-1 were of interest prior to the sounding rocket test because of payload recovery considerations. At low roll rates the model was found to have acceptable dynamic characteristics. It was statically stable in pitch and yaw, exhibiting limit cycle pitch/yaw oscillations of no greater than 20 degrees (the angle between the models longitudinal axis and nadir). The model was able to recover from large upsets in pitch and yaw, although if sufficiently provoked it tumbled. Damping in roll was low. At high roll rates the pitch and yaw oscillations grew in magnitude and rate. This behavior was also observed during the sounding rocket flight test

    Millimeter wave experiment for ATS-F

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    A detailed description of spaceborne equipment is provided. The equipment consists of two transmitters radiating signals at 20 and 30 GHz from either U.S. coverage horn antennas or a narrow beam parabolic antenna. Three modes of operation are provided: a continuous wave mode, a multitone mode in which nine spectral lines having 180 MHz separation and spaced symmetrically about each carrier, and a communications mode in which communications signals from the main spacecraft transponder are modulated on the two carriers. Detailed performance attained in the flight/prototype model of the equipment is presented both under laboratory conditions and under environmental extremes. Provisions made for ensuring reliability in space operation are described. Also described the bench test equipment developed for use with the experiment, and a summary of the new technology is included

    Modified hydraulic braking system limits angular deceleration to safe values

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    Conventional spring actuated, hydraulically released, fail-safe disk braking system is modified to control the angular deceleration of a massive antenna. The hydraulic system provides an immediate preset pressure to the spring-loaded brake shoes and holds it at this value to decelerate the antenna at the desired rate

    Radio Images of 3C 58: Expansion and Motion of its Wisp

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    New 1.4 GHz VLA observations of the pulsar-powered supernova remnant 3C 58 have resulted in the highest-quality radio images of this object to date. The images show filamentary structure over the body of the nebula. The present observations were combined with earlier ones from 1984 and 1991 to investigate the variability of the radio emission on a variety of time-scales. No significant changes are seen over a 110 day interval. In particular, the upper limit on the apparent projected velocity of the wisp is 0.05c. The expansion rate of the radio nebula was determined between 1984 and 2004, and is 0.014+/-0.003%/year, corresponding to a velocity of 630+/-70 km/s along the major axis. If 3C 58 is the remnant of SN 1181, it must have been strongly decelerated, which is unlikely given the absence of emission from the supernova shell. Alternatively, the low expansion speed and a number of other arguments suggest that 3C 58 may be several thousand years old and not be the remnant of SN 1181.Comment: 12 pages; accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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