タイトル | LDEF Interplanetary Dust Experiment - Techniques for identification and study of long-lived orbital debris clouds |
著者(英) | Singer, S. F.; Cooke, W. J.; Montague, N. L.; Mulholland, J. D.; Wortman, J. J.; Oliver, J. P.; Weinberg, J. L.; Kassel, P. C.; Kinard, W. H. |
著者所属(英) | NASA Langley Research Center; Institute for Space Science and Technology, Inc.; North Carolina State Univ. |
発行日 | 1991-10-01 |
言語 | eng |
内容記述 | The Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) is a 12-sided, 4.3-m-diameter, 9.1-m-long cylinder designed and built by NASA Langley to carry experiments for extended periods in space. The LDEF was first placed in orbit by the Shuttle Challenger on 7 April 1984 and recovered by the Shuttle Columbia in January 1990, only days before it was expected to burn up in the earth's atmosphere. The Interplanetary Dust Experiment (IDE) was designed to detect impacts of extra-terrestrial particles and orbital debris. The IDE detectors (which covered about 1 sq m of the surface of LDEF) were sensitive to particles ranging in size from about 0.2 to 100 microns. Data were recorded for 11.5 months before the supply of magnetic tape was exhausted. Examination of the LDEF IDE dataset shows that impacts often occurred in 'bursts', during which numerous impacts occurred in a short time (typically 3-5 min) at a rate much greater than the average impact rate. In several cases, such events reoccurred each time the LDEF returned to the same point in its orbit. Such multi-orbit event sequences were found to extend for as many as 25 or more orbits. |
NASA分類 | ASTRONAUTICS (GENERAL) |
レポートNO | 92A14713 IAF PAPER 91-285 |
権利 | Copyright |
|