6,175 research outputs found
Generation of optimal trajectories for Earth hybrid pole sitters
A pole-sitter orbit is a closed path that is constantly above one of the Earth's poles, by means of continuous low thrust. This work proposes to hybridize solar sail propulsion and solar electric propulsion (SEP) on the same spacecraft, to enable such a pole-sitter orbit. Locally-optimal control laws are found with a semi-analytical inverse method, starting from a trajectory that satisfies the pole-sitter condition in the Sun-Earth circular restricted three-body problem. These solutions are subsequently used as first guess to find optimal orbits, using a direct method based on pseudospectral transcription. The orbital dynamics of both the pure SEP case and the hybrid case are investigated and compared. It is found that the hybrid spacecraft allows savings on propellant mass fraction. Finally, it is shown that for sufficiently long missions, a hybrid pole-sitter, based on mid-term technology, enables a consistent reduction in the launch mass for a given payload, with respect to a pure SEP spacecraft
Displaced geostationary orbit design using hybrid sail propulsion
Because of an increase in the number of geostationary spacecraft and the limits imposed by east–west spacing
requirements, the geostationary orbit is becoming congested. To increase its capacity, this paper proposes to create
new geostationary slots by displacing the geostationary orbit either out of or in the equatorial plane by means of
hybrid solar sail and solar electric propulsion. To minimize propellant consumption, optimal steering laws for the
solar sail and solar-electric-propulsion thrust vectors are derived and the performance in terms of mission lifetime is
assessed. For comparison, similar analyses are performed for conventional propulsion, including impulsive and pure
solar electric propulsion. It is shown that hybrid sails outperform these propulsion techniques and that out-of-plane
displacements outperform in-plane displacements. The out-of-plane case is therefore further investigated in a
spacecraft mass budget to determine the payload mass capacity. Finally, two transfers that enable a further
improvement of the performance of hybrid sails for the out-of-plane case are optimized using a direct pseudospectral
method: a seasonal transit between orbits displaced above and below the equatorial plane and a transit to a parking
orbit when geostationary coverage is not needed. Both transfers are shown to require only a modest propellant
budget, outweighing the improvements they can establish
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A dramatic isotope effect in the reaction of ClSiH with trimethylsilane-1-d: experimental evidence for intermediate complexes in silylene Si-H(D) insertion reactions
A kinetic isotope effect (kD/kH) of 7.4 has been found for the reaction of chlorosilylene with trimethysilane (Me3SiD vs Me3SiH). Such a value can be accounted for by theoretical modelling, but only if an internal rearrangement of the initially form complex is included in the mechanism. This provides the first concrete evidence for such complexes
An earth pole-sitter using hybrid propulsion
In this paper we investigate optimal pole-sitter orbits using hybrid solar sail and solar electric propulsion (SEP). A pole-sitter is a spacecraft that is constantly above one of the Earth's poles, by means of a continuous thrust. Optimal orbits, that minimize propellant mass consumption, are found both through a shape-based approach, and solving an optimal control problem, using a direct method based on pseudo-spectral techniques. Both the pure SEP case and the hybrid case are investigated and compared. It is found that the hybrid spacecraft allows consistent savings on propellant mass fraction. Finally, is it shown that for sufficiently long missions (more than 8 years), a hybrid spacecraft, based on mid-term technology, enables a consistent reduction in the launch mass for a given payload, with respect to a pure SEP spacecraft
Correlated photon pairs generated from a warm atomic ensemble
We present measurements of the cross-correlation function of photon pairs at
780 nm and 1367 nm, generated in a hot rubidium vapor cell. The temporal
character of the biphoton is determined by the dispersive properties of the
medium where the pair generation takes place. We show that short correlation
times occur for optically thick samples, which can be understood in terms of
off-resonant pair generation. By modifying the linear response of the sample,
we produce near-resonant photon pairs, which could in principle be used for
entanglement distribution
Specific heat amplitude ratios for anisotropic Lifshitz critical behaviors
We determine the specific heat amplitude ratio near a -axial Lifshitz
point and show its universal character. Using a recent renormalization group
picture along with new field-theoretical -expansion techniques,
we established this amplitude ratio at one-loop order. We estimate the
numerical value of this amplitude ratio for and . The result is in
very good agreement with its experimental measurement on the magnetic material
. It is shown that in the limit it trivially reduces to the
Ising-like amplitude ratio.Comment: 8 pages, RevTex, accepted as a Brief Report in Physical Review
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