237 research outputs found

    GEOMETRIC CONTROL OF INFLATABLE SURFACES

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    High precision inflatable surfaces were introduced when NASA created the ECHO 1 Balloon in 1960. The experiment proved that inflatable structures were a feasible alternative to their rigid counterparts for high precision applications. Today inflatable structures are being used in aviation and aerospace applications and the benefits of using such structures are being recognized. Inflatable structures used in high precision structures require the inflatable surfaces to have controllable and predictable geometries. Many applications such as solar sails and radar reflectors require the surface of such structures to have a uniform surfaces as such surfaces improve the efficiency of the structure. In the study presented, tests were conducted to determine which combination of factors affect surface flatness on a triangular test article. Factors tested include, three boundary conditions, two force loadings, and two fabric orientations. In total, twelve tests were conducted and results showed that which force loading and fabric orientations used greatly affected the Root Mean Square (RMS) of the surface. It was determined that using the triangular clamp along with 00 fabric orientation and high force loading provided the best results

    PULSAUR 2

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    PULSAUR II is a sounding rocket experiment to investigate the pulsating aurora and related phenomena. The payload consists of a complementary set of instruments designed specifically to look at the pulsating aurora. The project will be managed by the Norwegian Space Center, with integration in Norway. The rocket is due for launch in January 1994 from the Andoya rocket range. Southwest Research Institute provided an electron sensor for this campaign. It is a 'top hat' electron spectrometer, referred to as AREA (Angle Resolving Energy Analyzer), and is based on the electron sensor developed for the CENTAUR mission

    CYGNSS Launch and Early Ops: Parenting Octuplets

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    The eight micro-satellite Cyclone Global Navigation Satellite System (CYGNSS) constellation was launched on December 15, 2016. Each of the observatories carries a 4-channel GNSS-R receiver tuned to receive signals reflected by the Earth\u27s ocean surface from which near-surface wind speed is estimated. The mission is focused on providing high temporal and spatial sensing of the wind conditions under and near developing tropical storms and cyclones. CYGNSS is studying the relationship between ocean surface properties, moist atmospheric thermodynamics, radiation and convective dynamics to determine how a cyclone forms, whether it will strengthen, and how much. A recap of launch and early operations is presented via a somewhat humorous analogy to parenting octuplets, with lessons learned included throughout. Topics include the roller-coaster ride of false labor (launch delays); the excitement of the birth, er, launch; the euphoria of seeing all eight μ Sats born alive and breathing; the adrenaline rush of saving one μ Sat born on life support; the total exhaustion that comes with round-the clock care and feeding; and the mixed emotions that come with “sending them out into the world” after a few weeks of doting over them to see them grow up and make their mark in the world

    The Extreme Ultraviolet Spectrograph Sounding Rocket Payload: Recent Modifications for Planetary Observations in the EUV/FUV

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    We report on the status of modifications to an existing extreme ultraviolet (EUV) telescope/spectrograph sounding rocket payload for planetary observations in the 800 - 1200 A wavelength band. The instrument is composed of an existing Wolter Type 2 grazing incidence telescope, a newly built 0.4-m normal incidence Rowland Circle spectrograph, and an open-structure resistive-anode microchannel plate detector. The modified payload has successfully completed three NASA sounding rocket flights within 1994-1995. Future flights are anticipated for additional studies of planetary and cometary atmospheres and interstellar absorption. A detailed description of the payload, along with the performance characteristics of the integrated instrument are presented. In addition, some preliminary flight results from the above three missions are also presented

    Inhomogeneous Gravity

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    We study the inhomogeneous cosmological evolution of the Newtonian gravitational 'constant' G in the framework of scalar-tensor theories. We investigate the differences that arise between the evolution of G in the background universes and in local inhomogeneities that have separated out from the global expansion. Exact inhomogeneous solutions are found which describe the effects of masses embedded in an expanding FRW Brans-Dicke universe. These are used to discuss possible spatial variations of G in different regions. We develop the technique of matching different scalar-tensor cosmologies of different spatial curvature at a boundary. This provides a model for the linear and non-linear evolution of spherical overdensities and inhomogeneities in G. This allows us to compare the evolution of G and \dot{G} that occurs inside a collapsing overdense cluster with that in the background universe. We develop a simple virialisation criterion and apply the method to a realistic lambda-CDM cosmology containing spherical overdensities. Typically, far slower evolution of \dot{G} will be found in the bound virialised cluster than in the cosmological background. We consider the behaviour that occurs in Brans-Dicke theory and in some other representative scalar-tensor theories.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures. Submitted to MNRAS. References adde
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