Title: Why explore space
1Why explore space?
- Science
- Commerce
- Defense
- Earth observation
- National prestige
2Science in Space
- Initially part of scientific method
- Verify theoretical predictions of orbital theory
- Initially the hazards of getting to space and
operating in space not well known - Thus operational systems not supported by
commerce of government. - Space scientists funded by the government to
perform one-off experiments. - In doing so the foundations for operational use
of space were laid.
3Funding
- Space science falls in the category of Big
Science a term which relates to the level of
funding and infrastructure support need to
perform experiments. - If the government funds the work how is it
decided who gets support? - For defense related work, congress and military
work this out often in secret for obvious
reasons. - For civilian research a system of proposal
solicitation followed by peer review is used. - In hard times this can break down because
everybody proposes in a given area and there are
no knowledgeable peers left in the community to
review the proposals. - Even with government funding the areas of study
are restricted because of general decisions made
on the research emphases by the government
agencies advised by panels of scientists. - E.g. Space science not Science in Space edict
from NASA Office of Space Science some years ago.
4Issues
- Should taxpayers money be used for scientific
research with no immediate benefit to the public
at large? - Benefits of the advance of scientific knowledge
- Maintenance of national workforce at leading edge
of science and technology - Is it appropriate for government to do groundwork
for future for-profit companies? - What is the ultimate pay-off of the governments
investment to individuals and to the country? - Is it worth it?
- Where would the money be better spent?
5A New Arena for Scientific Observation
- An orbiting or escaping spacecraft provides an
experimental platform with unique features - Above 99.99 or more of the atmosphere
- Located within the interaction regions of the sun
and the earth (planets) (ionosphere,
magnetosphere, solar wind) - Very low gravitational forces (platform in
free-fall) - Normally at least 300 km above earths surface.
6Summary of Measurement Techniques Employed in
Space.
- In-situ measurements of space environment
- Instruments to measure many properties of the
material at location of spacecraft. - Remote sensing without atmospheric absorption
- E.g. Hubble, Chandra, Cosmic and Gamma rays,
Solar Radiation - Limb scanning of planetary atmospheres
- Transport of people and instruments to surface of
moon - Instrument also to surfaces of some solar system
planets - People to planets later ???
- Earth Imaging
- Surface features, clouds, air temperatures ...
- Refection, self emission
- Optical, UV, IR, Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
- Active Experiments
- Stimulation/response, use space environment as
plasma laboratory. - Microgravity Experiments
- Chemistry (crystals, proteins, )
- Human and plant physiology
7Spacecraft Infrastructure
- In order to be functional and provide useful data
to the ground, spacecraft need the following
basic infrastructure which in general should be
lightweight (remember /kg to orbit) - Mechanical structure and shielding
- Launch (landing) stresses
- Operation in vacuum
- Thickness of skin depends on environment and need
to shield electronics - Power
- Solar energy
- Other
- Attitude control
- Spin stabilized
- 3-axis control
- Telemetry
- Radio links to send digital data stream to ground
- On-board networking to assemble data from myriad
sources - Telecommand
- Reliable, secure radio uplinks to adjust the
spacecraft functions - Life support
- Breathing, eating, excreting, sleeping in a
comfortable temperature
8In-situ Measurements
- Means in place and uses sensors which detect
properties at the location of the spacecraft. - Initially these concentrated on the upper
atmosphere - Local gas and plasma properties
- Incoming fluxes of energetic particles
- Electric and magnetic fields
- DC and AC (electromagnetic and plasma waves)
- Then measurements extended into the magnetosphere
and the solar wind - Now we have in-situ measurements from
interplanetary space - Note primarily in the ecliptic plane (except
Ulysses (later)) - Two examples of an earlier and current satellites
carrying in-situ sensors for the ionosphere and
the magnetosphere follow.
9Dynamics Explorer 1
- Launch Information
- Launch Date/Time 1981-08-03 at 095600 UTC
- Launch Site/Country Vandenburg AFB, United
States - Launch Vehicle Delta
- Orbital Information
- Orbital Period 409.00 m
- Inclination 89.90 degrees Eccentricity
0.62000 - Perigee 567 km Apogee 23,289
km - DE-1 Experiments
- Magnetic Field Observations Triaxial Fluxgate
Magnetometer (MAG-A) (PI Slavin) - Plasma Waves Instrument (PWI) (PI Gurnett)
- Spin Scan Auroral Imager (SAI) (PI Frank)
- Retarding Ion Mass Spectrometer (RIMS) (PI
Chappell) - High Altitude Plasma Instrument (HAPI) (PI
Burch) - Energetic Ion Composition Spectrometer (EICS)
(PI Shelley) - Auroral Physics Theory (PI Maggs)
- Controlled and Naturally Occurring Wave Particle
Interactions Theory (PI Helliwell)
DE-1 Spin test
10POLAR
- Launch
- 24 Feb. 1996 Launch Site Vandenberg, Launch
Vehicle Delta 7925 . - Orbit
- Perigee 5,554 km. Apogee 50,423 km.
Inclination 86.3 deg. - Instrument Descriptions
- Plasma Waves Investigation (PWI)
- Magnetic Fields Experiment (MFE)
- Toroidal Imaging Mass-Angle Spectrograph (TIMAS)
- Electric Fields Investigation (EFI)
- Thermal Ion Dynamics Experiment (TIDE)
- Ultraviolet Imager (UVI)
- Visible Imaging System (VIS)
- Polar Ionospheric X-Ray Imaging Experiment
(PIXIE) - Charge and Mass Magnetosperic Ion Composition
Experiment (CAMMICE) - Comprehensive Energetic-Particle Pitch-Angle
Distribution - - Source/Loss Cone Energetic Particle Spectrometer
(CEPPAD/SEPS) - Hot Plasma Analyzer (HYDRA)
11Remote Sensing
- Another class of space science observation uses
sensors mounted on the satellite which are
observing radiated energy from distant sources. - The need to be in space to do this is to avoid
the complex absorption of radiation by the
earths atmosphere and ionosphere. - But limb scanning utilizes atmospheric absorption
as source sets behind a planet - This type of satellite includes astrophysical
measurements by the Great Observatories. - This type of remote sensing will be addressed
later. - It also includes earth and planetary imaging.
- These also will be addressed later.
- In some cases the radiant energy is generated on
the satellite and reflected from the region under
consideration. - Space borne ionosonde
- Space borne Lidar in planning
- Two examples of this type of scientific satellite
follow. - One early solar observatory and one current
satellite with a recent launch date
12The OSO-8 Satellite
- The 8th Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO-8) was
launched on 21 June 1975 by NASA. While OSO-8's
primary objective was to observe the Sun, four
instruments were dedicated to observations of
other celestial X-ray sources brighter than a few
milliCrab. OSO-8 ceased operations on 1 October
1978. - Mission Characteristics
- Lifetime 21 June 1975 - 1 October 1978 Energy
Range 0.15 keV - 1 MeV -
- Payload
- GSFC Cosmic X Ray Spectroscopy Experiment (GCXSE)
- High Energy Celestial X-ray Experiment
- Soft X-ray Background Radiation Experiment
- Graphite Crystal X-ray Spectrometer
- Science Highlights
- Iron-line detection in the X-ray spectra of a
cluster of galaxies. - Detection of Black-Body spectrum from X-ray
bursts. - Set upper limit on the polarization of radiation
from several X-ray binaries. - Archive
- Light curves and Raw data from the GCXSE
-
13Image Program
- IMAGE was launched from the Western Range
(Vandenberg AFB) in March, 2000. The Delta II
rocket placed IMAGE in an elliptical polar orbit
with an apogee altitude of 7 Earth radii (44,647
km) and a perigee altitude of 1000 km. The
initial apogee was at 40 degrees north latitude.
IMAGE will completes one orbit every 13.5 hours. - Instruments
- Neutral Atom Imagers (NAI)
- Low-Energy Neutral Atom (LENA) imager
- Medium-Energy Neutral Atom (MENA) imager
- High-Energy Neutral Atom (HENA) imager
- Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUV)
- Far Ultraviolet Imager (FUV)
- Radio Plasma Imaging (RPI)
14Early New Result from IMAGEEUV Imager
Sharp cutoff at plasmasphere boundary
NP
NP
Earths shadow
Earths shadow
Scattered 30.4 nm sunlight from helium ions in
the earths plasmasphere
15Planetary Missions
- Three general categories of spacecraft
- Planetary orbiter
- Planetary flyby
- Planetary lander
- Extended to digger and/or rover on some occasions
- The manned and unmanned lunar program will not be
further addressed. - Planetary probes normally include both in-situ
and remote sensing instruments. - Many missions include both orbiters and landers.
- They must operate at extreme distances from the
earth and the sun which poses communication and
electrical power problems. - They must be very reliable for the long journeys
to and between the solar system planets.
16Planetary - Orbiters
PIONEER VENUS ORBITER Launch 1978, in orbit
1980-92 The Pioneer Venus Orbiter carried 17
experiments and 4 multiprobe landers
MAGELLAN Launch 1989 Mapping of Venus using SAR
radar
17Galileo
Galileo has been orbiting Jupiter since late
1995, and completed its 29th orbit as it flew by
the moon Ganymede on December 28, 2000
18IMAGES FROM GALILEO(1)
Order from planet
1
2
4
3
Ganymede
Callisto
Io
Europa
These are called the Galilean satellites after
Galileo who first observed them in 1610
Composite Image of the Four Largest Moons of
Jupiter
19IMAGES FROM GALILEO(2)EUROPA
Hemisphere Images of Europa (true color and false
color)
Close up image of surface Showing what are
believed to be ice fields
20Planetary Flyby
Jupiter
Saturn
21ULYSSES FLYBY JUPITER
Launch 1990 arrived at Jupiter 1992
22PLANETARY LANDERS
Mars Pathfinder with Mars Rover Launched 1996
Viking Mars Lander Launched 1975
23MARS
Martian Landscape Observed from Mars Pathfinder
24Astrophysics Missions
- These spacecraft primarily use remote sensors
spanning a large part of the electromagnetic wave
spectrum. - The spacecraft must be very reliable to survive
the long operational lifetimes planned for such
missions. - The spacecraft are often very large to
accommodate large telescopes with superior
light collecting capability. - Reliability and complexity drives up the price of
this category of spacecraft. - In the last 10 years a subset of the
astrophysicsal missions have been named the
Great Observatories - E.g. Compton GRO, Chandra, Hubble, Infrared Space
Observatory (ISO) - Operated like large ground-based telescope
facilities - Government supported aided by the continuing wide
interest by the general public in astronomy and
cosmology.
25Spanning the Spectrum IR to X-ray
Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) Launched
1995 Operational 1995-98
Advanced X-ray facility (Chandra) Launched July
1999
26Cosmic IR Observation by ISO
- A ring of organic molecules around HD 97300
(ESA/ISO/ISOCAM and R. Siebenmorgen et al. ) - This image shows extended emission, an elliptical
ring structure of size about 0.045x0.03 pc as
well as two peaks of emission, separated by about
3" (240 AU). One of the two peaks coincides with
the position of HD 97300, while the other may be
an embedded companion. The data show that the
emission in this region is dominated by the
infrared emission bands centered at 6.2, 7.7,
8.7, 11.3 and 12.5 µm, with a very small
contribution from continuum emission at longer
wavelengths.
pc parsec , distance at which earths orbit
subtends angle of 1 sec (3.25 light years)
27Cosmic X-ray Observations from Chandra
- E0102-72 is a supernova remnant in the Small
Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky
Way. - Located in the constellation Tucana, this galaxy
is 190,000 light years from Earth. The remnant is
approximately a thousand years old. Stretching
across forty light years of space, the expanding
multi-million degree shell of gas resembles a
flaming cosmic wheel.
28Chandra Observes Black Hole in Andromeda
- Andromeda Galaxy (M31) Our nearest neighbor
spiral galaxy at a distance of two million light
years. - This X-ray image shows the central portion of the
Andromeda Galaxy. The blue dot in the center of
the image is a "cool" million degree X-ray source
where a supermassive black hole with the mass of
30 million suns is located. The X-rays are
produced by matter funneling toward the black
hole. Numerous other hotter X-ray sources are
also apparent. Most of these are probably due to
X-ray binary systems, in which a neutron star or
black hole is in a close orbit around a normal
star.
29The Hubble Space Telescope
- Launch Date April, 1990
- On-orbit dry mass 11600.00 kg
- Nominal Power Output 2400.00 W
- The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) was the first
and flagship mission of NASA's Great
Observatories program. Designed to complement the
wavelength capabilities of the other spacecraft
in the program (CGRO, AXAF, and SIRTF) - HST has a 2.4 m, f/24 Ritchey-Chretien telescope
capable of performing observations in the
visible, near-ultraviolet, and near-infrared
(1150 A to 1 mm). - Placed into a low-earth orbit by the space
shuttle, HST was designed to be modular so that
on subsequent shuttle missions it could be
recovered, have faulty or obsolete parts replaced
with new and/or improved instruments, and be
re-released. - HST is roughly cylindrical in shape, 13.1 m
end-to-end and 4.3 m in diameter at its widest
point.
Note Service call to be launched this Thursday
30Striking Image of Nebula by Hubble
- Image of Keyhole nebula showing very fine detail
of the structure of the gas and dust clouds
31Hubble images star formation
- Star formation in a distant galaxy illuminates
the whole galaxy
32Planetary Observations by Hubble
- Auroral light emission at the north and south
poles of Saturn
33Active Experiments
- Mostly related to plasma physics studies.
- Until space age these experiments were done only
in vacuum chambers - Problems due to wall interference with effects
being studied. - Limits to small size, fast responding
experiments. - Ionosphere forms a low pressure region with
significant ionization present. - Basically stimulus/response studies in which
stimulus can be - Solid material interactions
- Satellite wakes
- Natural vehicle charging
- Material release
- Neutral gases
- Ionized gases
- Particle beams, ions, electrons, neutral atoms
- Electric field application
- DC, currents, vehicle charging
- AC, wave plasma interactions
- Many active experiments can be related to natural
phenomena in the atmosphere/ionosphere/magnetosphe
re region. They have the advantage of being
performed under controlled conditions.
34Tethered Satellite System (TSS)
- Join NASA/Italian program.
- 1.6 m diameter satellite deployed on a 20 km
insulated, conducting tether. - Motion through earths magnetic field induced up
to 5000 V bias between the satellite and the
shuttle. - Studied current collecting capabilities.
- Satellite instrumented to study distribution of
charge carriers. - Measurements aided and facilitated by additional
instrumentation on board the Space Shuttle. - Tether broke when almost full deployment was
reached.
TSS-1R Space Shuttle flight STS-75 Launched Feb.
22, 1996