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Antenna and propagation studies for spacecraft systems: Addendum to preflight SL-1/SL-3 Skylab VHF ranging coverage (early and late TPI)

Abstract

A preflight assessment is presented of the expected Skylab VHF ranging coverage for the rendezvous portion of the SL-1/SL-3 mission, assuming a 28 July 1973 launch date, for the alternative trajectory cases characterized by either an early TPI or a late TPI. In this assessment early TPI and late TPI are used to indicate a TPI maneuver occurring 10 minutes prior to or after the nominally scheduled TPI maneuver, respectively. The Saturn workshop (SWS) maintains a solar inertial (SI) attitude throughout rendezvous for both trajectory cases. The results summarized concern VHF ranging function performance during that period most likely to be affected by off-nominal TPI conditions, i.e., NSR (5:56 g.e.t.) to station keeping. Curves are presented which show the variation in received power levels on both spacecraft-to-spacecraft links from about 100 n.mi. range to CSM and SWS station keeping. Appropriate threshold levels are shown on these received power curves to indicate zero circuit margins for the ranging function

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