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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The benefits of using a hypersonic waverider for spacecraft trajectory modification are presented. A waverider is a hypersonic vehicle specifically designed so that the undersurface bow shock is attached to the leading edge, which provides for the highest known lift-to-drag ratios achievable at high Mach number flight. Several viable space missions are suggested which could use such configurations for low-drag aero-assisted maneuvers in planetary atmospheres. It is shown that large changes in the spacecraft velocity vector can be accomplished with acceptably small losses in energy due to drag using a waverider aeroshell. The primary advantage of an aero-assist maneuver is suggested by comparison to a traditional gravity-assist trajectory. Some scaling laws are presented for comparing waveriders designed for different planetary atmospheres, and it is shown that the compositional differences between the terrestrial planets has a minimal impact on waverider design.
    Keywords: AERODYNAMICS
    Type: British Interplanetary Society, Journal (ISSN 0007-094X); 46; 1; p. 11-20
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets (ISSN 0022-4650); 29; 5; p. 653-660.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Keywords: SPACE RADIATION
    Type: Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets (ISSN 0022-4650); 29; 5; p. 646-652.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: This paper presents an analysis of the sensitivity of single event upset (SEU) rate predictions to changes in the direct ionization-inducing environment. An examination based on the nature of the SEU rate equation is presented for the case in which the perturbation is constant across varying particle linear energy transfer (LET). It is shown that the relative variation in SEU rate is equal to the relative perturbation in flux. Results are also presented for the case in which the environment perturbations exist in small LET bins. Through this analysis it is shown that the relative variation in expected SEU rate is equal to that in flux only for the LET regime in which the product of the cross section and differential flux is maximum.
    Keywords: Atomic and Molecular Physics
    Type: Transactions on Nuclear Science
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2016-03-10
    Description: Over the past decade, there has been an increasing interest in designing small commercial launch vehicles. Some of these designs include OSC's Pegasus, and AMROC's Aquila. Even though these vehicles are very different in their overall design characteristics, they all share a common thread of being expensive to design and manufacture. Each of these vehicles has an estimated production and operations cost of over $15000/kg of payload. In response to this high cost factor, the University of Maryland is developing a cost-effective alternative launch vehicle, Maryland's Innovative Orbital Technologically Advanced University Rocket (MINOTAUR). A preliminary cost analysis projects that MINOTAUR will cost under $10000/kg of payload. MINOTAUR will also serve as an enriching project devoted to an entirely student-designed-and-developed launch vehicle. This preliminary design of MINOTAUR was developed entirely by undergraduates in the University of Maryland's Space Vehicle Design class. At the start of the project, certain requirements and priorities were established as a basis from which to begin the design phase: (1) carry a 100 kg payload into a 200 km circular orbit; (2) provide maximum student involvement in the design, manufacturing, and launch phases of the project; and (3) use hybrid propulsion throughout. The following is the list of the project's design priorities (from highest to lowest): (1) safety, (2) cost, (3) minimum development time, (4) maximum use of the off-the-shelf components, (5) performance, and (6) minimum use of pyrotechnics.
    Keywords: SPACECRAFT PROPULSION AND POWER
    Type: USRA, Proceedings of the 8th Annual Summer Conference: NASA(USRA Advanced Design Program; p 146-158
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The aerodynamic performance of a vehicle designed to execute an aerogravity assisted maneuver, which combines a gravitational turn with a low-drag atmosphere pass, is examined. The advantage of the aerogravity assisted maneuver, as opposed to a more traditional gravity-assist trajectory, is that, through the use of a controlled atmospheric flight, nearly any deflection angle around a gravitating body can be realized. This holds the promise of providing extremely large values of Delta V. The success of such a maneuver depends on being able to design a vehicle which can execute sustained atmospheric flight at Mach numbers in the range of 50 - 100 with minimal drag losses. Some simple modeling is used to demonstrate design rules for the design of such vehicles, and to estimate the deterioration of their performance during the flight. Two sample aerogravity-assisted maneuvers are detailed, including a close solar approach requiring modest Delta V, and a sprint mission to Pluto.
    Keywords: ASTRODYNAMICS
    Type: AIAA PAPER 91-0053
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The hypersonic waverider concept is explored in the context of aircraft design and optimization. Waveriders are vehicles which provide the highest known values of lift-to-drag ratio, suggesting that they are ideal for hypersonic cruise applications. However, these high lift-to-drag ratios are not retained with engine integration. It is shown that waveriders may have applications to the design of accelerating vehicles, even though high L/D is no longer a priority, because they exhibit relatively low drag, and have highly desirable properties for engine/airframe integration. Along these lines, waveriders provide highly uniform flowfields, making them ideal for forebodies on engine-airframe integrated configurations. The inverse design methodology of a waverider lends itself readily to the vehicle design process. Characteristics which govern the performance of a hypersonic vehicle for cruise and accelerating flight are examined, and applied to waverider vehicle design. Finally, it is shown that waveriders, though configured for the specific shock flowfield of a single design point, have acceptable off-design performance characteristics.
    Keywords: LAUNCH VEHICLES AND SPACE VEHICLES
    Type: AIAA PAPER 91-3304
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Two classes of airbreathing hypersonic vehicle concepts, one for primarily cruise missions and the other for accelerator type missions, are presented. Both are designed with waverider airframes and hydrogen-fueled scramjet engine modules. Cruise configurations are optimized for the product of I(sp) and L/D while matching lift to weight and thrust to drag at some equivalence ratio. Accelerator configurations are optimized for effective specific impulse while matching lift to weight at an equivalence ratio of one. The method and computer code developed to optimize the configurations are discussed. The features and design tradeoffs for each class of vehicles are described. Recently available weight estimates for all-body waveriders have had a significant impact on the integrated configurations. Mach 8 vehicles at 40 km altitude optimized with the cruise objective function have L/Ds of 2.55 to 2.92 and I(sp)s of 2850 to 2940 sec. A Mach 14 vehicle at 40-km altitude optimized with the accelerator objective function has an I(sp) sub eff of 189 sec, and a Mach 10 vehicle an I(sp) sub eff of 880 sec.
    Keywords: AIRCRAFT DESIGN, TESTING AND PERFORMANCE
    Type: AIAA PAPER 92-1205
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This paper presents a numerical study that investigate the effects of nonequilibrium chemistry, and in particular, wall catalycity on the separated flow region generated by an oblique shock wave impinging upon a flat plate boundary layer. To obtain a solution to this problem, the full two dimensional Navier-Stokes equations were solved using MacCormack's predictor-corrector time dependent technique on a rectangular grid. Nonequilibrium chemistry was included by utilizing the 5 species, 17 reaction modified Dunn-Kang chemical kinetics model. Separate results were obtained for: calorically perfect, chemically reacting - noncatalytic wall, and chemically reacting - fully catalytic wall cases, for a given set of flow conditions. A direct comparison of all three cases revealed a slight decrease in the peak heat transfer for the noncatalytic wall case, as compared to the calorically perfect case. On the other hand, the fully catalytic wall case had a tremendous increase in the peak surface heat transfer. It is concluded that, for the particular conditons treated here (nearly frozen flow in the free stream), the effects of the nonequilibrium chemically reacting flow on the shock-wave/boundary-layer interaction depend critically on the catalycity of the wall, having virtually no effect for the case of a noncatalytic wall, and exerting a tremendous effect for a fully catalytic wall.
    Keywords: AERODYNAMICS
    Type: AIAA PAPER 91-0245
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: This paper describes the process of integrating available environment models into a single package that calculates the radiation environment for any earth orbit quickly and accurately with the only input being initial orbit parameters, launch date and length of mission, and units of output. The radiation dose is calculated for particles penetrating varying aluminum shielding thicknesses and incident upon several materials inside. Included also are modifications that have been made to the codes that account for the decrease of the magnetic field with time, which allows the use of data taken in the past to accurately predict a future environment. The complete package has relatively short run times, 20 minutes per mission on a Micro VAX II, allowing multiple iterations for application to mission design and planning.
    Keywords: SPACE RADIATION
    Type: AIAA PAPER 91-0098
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