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  • Electronics and Electrical Engineering  (2)
  • Instrumentation and Photography  (2)
  • SPACE SCIENCES  (2)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-09-13
    Description: Future NASA satellite detector systems must be cooled to the 0.1 K temperature range to meet the stringent energy resolution and sensitivity requirements demanded by mid-term astronomy missions. The development of adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration (ADR) materials that can efficiently cool from the passive radiative cooling limit of approx. 30 K down to sub-Kelvin under low magnetic fields (H less than or equal to 3 T) would represent a significant improvement in space-based cooling technology. Governed by these engineering goals, our efforts have focused on quantifying the change in magnetic entropy of rare-earth garnets and perovskites. Various compositions within the gadolinium gallium iron garnet solid solution series (GGIG, Gd3Ga(5-x)Fe(x)O12, 0.00 less than or equal to X less than or equal to 5.00) and gadolinium aluminum perovskite (GAP, GdAlO3) have been synthesized via an organometallic complex approach and confirmed with powder x-ray diffraction. The magnetization of the GGIG and GAP materials has been measured as a function of composition (0.00 less than or equal to X less than or equal to 5.00), temperature (2 K less than or equal to T less than or equal to 30 K) and applied magnetic field (0 T less than or equal to H less than or equal to 3 T). The magnetic entropy change (DeltaS(sub mag)) between 0 T and 3 T was determined from the magnetization data. In the GGIG system, DeltaS(sub mag) was compositionally dependent; Fe(sup 3+) additions up to X less than or equal to 2.44 increased DeltaS(sub mag) at T 〉 5 K. For GAP, DeltaS(sub mag) was similar to that of GGIG, X = 0.00, both in terms of magnitude and temperature dependence at T 〉 10 K. However, the DeltaS(sub mag) of GAP at T 〈 10 K was less than the endmember GGIG composition, X = 0.00, and exhibited maximum approx. 5 K.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-05-29
    Description: Lunar navigation analysis using passive nongyro, inertial navigation, and radio frequency technology
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: NASA-CR-69859 , BSR-1134, SEC. 1-7
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-05-29
    Description: Component capabilities and requirements for lunar navigation concepts
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: NASA-CR-68285 , BSR-1134, SEC. 8-10, APPEND.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: Large axially-symmetric ground-based dual-reflector antennas are used in a variety of applications simultaneously requiring very high gain and very low noise (e.g., satellite communications, radio astronomy, deep-space communications, and radar). In these systems, reducing the noise by 10 % is equivalent to increasing the antenna gain by roughly 0.5 dB. Since the early days of radio-astronomy this fact has continuously driven efforts to reduce the noise of front-end low-noise amplifiers--a major noise contributor. As the performance of the front-end amplifiers improved, the relative importance of the noise generated by the surrounding warm ground increased, causing the antenna noise to become a major factor in the overall system sensitivity. Since large ground-based reflectors have been around for several decades, the various electrical and mechanical parameters affecting their performance have received considerable attention and are generally well understood. However, the impact of the subreflector supporting struts on the antenna noise performance remains a source of uncertainty. The reason for this stems from the usually large electrical dimensions involved, which precludes the accurate modeling of the various strut-scattering mechanisms. For the particular antennas used on NASA's Deep Space Network, which have been designed to minimize all noise sources, several studies have typically reported measured noise temperatures between 2 and 3 K (at approx. 8.45 GHz, antenna pointing at zenith), attributed to the struts and other unknown effects (see for example [1] and [2]). With this in mind, an effort has recently been conducted to determine optimal strut shapes to reduce the associated noise contribution [3].
    Keywords: Electronics and Electrical Engineering
    Type: IEEE Antennas and Propagation Society International Symposium 1997. Volume 3: Digest; 1659-1662; IEEE-Catalog-97CH36122-Vol-3
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Science objectives of the LADEE Mission are to (1) determine the composition, and time variability of the tenuous lunar atmosphere and (2) to characterize the dust environment and its variability. These studies will extend the in-situ characterization of the environment that were carried out decades ago with the Apollo missions and a variety of ground based studies. The focused LADEE measurements will enable a more complete understanding of dust and gas sources and sinks. Sources of gas include UV photo-stimulated desorption, sputtering by plasma and micrometeorites, as well as thermal release of species such as argon from the cold service or venting from the lunar interior. Sinks include recondensation on the surface and escape through a variety of mechanisms. The LADEE science payload consists of an Ultraviolet Spectrometer, a Neutral Mass Spectrometer, and a Dust Detector. The LADEE orbit will include multiple passes at or below 50 km altitude and will target repeated sampling at the sunrise terminator where exospheric density will be highest for some thermally released species. The science mission will be implemented in approximately three months to allow measurements to be made over a period of one or more lunations In addition to the science mission NASA will use this mission to demonstrate optical communication technology away from low Earth orbit.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: GSFC.CPR.6680.2012 , 43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference; Mar 19, 2012 - Mar 23, 2012; The Woodlands, TX
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Two-dimensional MEMS microshutter arrays (MSA) have been fabricated at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to enable cryogenic (approximately 35 K) spectrographic astronomy measurements in the near-infrared region. Functioning as a focal plane object selection device, the MSA is a 2-D programmable aperture mask with fine resolution, high efficiency and high contrast. The MSA are close- packed silicon nitride shutters (cell size of 100 x 200 microns) patterned with a torsion flexure to allow opening to 90 degrees. A layer of magnetic material is deposited onto each shutter to permit magnetic actuation. Two electrodes are deposited, one onto each shutter and another onto the support structure side-wall, permitting electrostatic latching and 2-D addressing. New techniques were developed to test MSA under mission-similar conditions (8 K less than or equal to T less than 300K). The magnetic rotisserie has proven to be an excellent tool for rapid characterization of MSA. Tests conducted with the magnetic rotisserie method include accelerated cryogenic lifetesting of unpackaged 128 x 64 MSA and parallel measurement of the magneto-mechanical stiffness of shutters in pathfinder test samples containing multiple MSA designs. Lifetest results indicate a logarithmic failure rate out to approximately 10(exp 6) shutter actuations. These results have increased our understanding of failure mechanisms and provide a means to predict the overall reliability of MSA devices.
    Keywords: Electronics and Electrical Engineering
    Type: Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Workshop; Jun 06, 2004 - Jun 10, 2004; Hilton Head, SC; United States
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