Impacts on Hubble Space Telescope solar arrays: Discrimination between natural and man-made particles

被引:23
作者
Kearsley, AT
Drolshagen, G
McDonnell, JAM
Mandeville, JC
Moussi, A
机构
[1] Nat Hist Museum, Dept Mineral, London SW7 5BD, England
[2] Estec, ESA, NL-2200 AG Noordwijk, Netherlands
[3] Open Univ, Planetary & Space Res Inst, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, Bucks, England
[4] DESP, ONERA, F-31055 Toulouse, France
来源
SPACE DEBRIS | 2005年 / 35卷 / 07期
关键词
space debris; micrometeoroids; Hubble Space Telescope; hypervelocity impact; analytical electron microscopy; solar array;
D O I
10.1016/j.asr.2005.05.049
中图分类号
V [航空、航天];
学科分类号
08 ; 0825 ;
摘要
A Post-Flight Investigation was initiated by the European Space Agency to analyze impacts on solar arrays of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), exposed to space for 8.25 years at approximately 600 km altitude. The solar cells deployed during the first Service Mission (SM-1 in December 1993) were retrieved in March 2002 as part of Service Mission 3B (SM-313). A sub-panel of 2 m(2) was cut from the arrays for subsequent selection and removal of individual solar cells for analysis. Six cells (4.8 x 10(-3) m(2)) were surveyed for flux of all craters of sizes greater than 5 microns. Analytical scanning electron microscopy was used to analyse residues in 111 features of 3-4000 micron conchoidal detachment diameter (D-co), examined on 23 solar cells. Eighty three show identifiable residue: 38 are Space Debris impacts and 45 Micrometeoroid impacts. Of the remaining 28, 2 contain residue of ambiguous origin, 1 is probably a minor manufacturing flaw, 1 is obscured by contamination, and 24 are unresolved, lacking recognizable residue. The majority of space debris impacts on the SM-3B cells are less than 80 microns D-co, dominated by Al-rich residue, probably of solid rocket motor origin, although three may be due to sodium metal droplet impacts. Three larger features include paint pigment and binder, ferrous alloy, and possible carbon-fibre composite material debris. Micrometeoroid residues are found across the entire crater size range and dominate features of between 100 and 1000 microns, their residues are similar to those found in earlier SM-1 surveys. Fe- and Mg-rich silicates dominate; Fe sulphides are common and there are occasional vesicular Ni- and S-bearing mafic silicates of hydrous phyllosilicate origin. A single sodium aluminosilicate residue and one Fe Ni metal residue were found; as well as enigmatic Mg- and S-bearing residues, all considered as probably of micrometeoroid origin. A few Fe-, O- and C-bearing residues were classified as of ambiguous origin. (c) 2005 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of COSPAR.
引用
收藏
页码:1254 / 1262
页数:9
相关论文
共 17 条
[1]  
Brearley A.J., 1998, PLANETARY MAT
[2]   CARBONACEOUS COMPONENTS IN THE COMET HALLEY DUST [J].
FOMENKOVA, MN ;
CHANG, S ;
MUKHIN, LM .
GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 1994, 58 (20) :4503-4512
[3]  
Graham GA, 2001, ESA SP PUBL, V473, P197
[4]   The collection of micrometeoroid remnants from low earth orbit [J].
Graham, GA ;
Kearsley, AT ;
Grady, MM ;
Wright, IP ;
McDonnell, JAM .
SAMPLE RETURN MISSIONS TO SMALL BODIES, 2000, 25 (02) :303-307
[5]   Hypervelocity impacts in low Earth orbit: Cosmic dust versus space debris [J].
Graham, GA ;
Kearsley, AT ;
Grady, MM ;
Wright, IP ;
Griffiths, AD ;
McDonnell, JAM .
SPACE DEBRIS, 1999, 23 (01) :95-100
[6]   The chemistry of micrometeoroid and space debris remnants captured on Hubble Space Telescope solar cells [J].
Graham, GA ;
McBride, N ;
Kearsley, AT ;
Drolshagen, G ;
Green, SF ;
McDonnell, JAM ;
Grady, MM ;
Wright, IP .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMPACT ENGINEERING, 2001, 26 (1-10) :263-274
[7]   Natural and simulated hypervelocity impacts into solar cells. [J].
Graham, GA ;
Kearsley, AT ;
Grady, MM ;
Wright, IP ;
Herbert, MK ;
McDonnell, JAM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF IMPACT ENGINEERING, 1999, 23 (01) :319-330
[8]  
HERBERT MK, 1997, ESA SPEC PUB, V393, P169
[9]   Impact features and projectile residues in aerogel exposed on Mir [J].
Hörz, F ;
Zolensky, ME ;
Bernhard, RP ;
See, TH ;
Warren, JL .
ICARUS, 2000, 147 (02) :559-579
[10]  
HORZ F, 2002, SPACE DEBRIS, V2, P51