An Insight into the Features of the OAO-C Thermal Design

1973 ◽  
Vol 95 (4) ◽  
pp. 1039-1047 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Fine ◽  
J. Quadrini ◽  
S. Ollendorf

The Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO)-C was successfully launched into 400-nautical mile circular orbit on August 21, 1972. For this spacecraft, a unique sensitivity approach to the thermal design was developed which resulted in a predictal design—the merits of which should be considered for application on future spacecra. The OAO-C is also serving as a test bed for the evaluation of thermal control hardware. To provide flight data for space program applications, experiments for a new coating and four different heat pipe designs are on this spacecraft. The data derived from OAO-C will be extremely valuable for such future programs as the Large Space Telescope (LST) and the Earth Observation Satellite (EOS). This paper will describe the detailed of the sensitivity design approach and thermal control hardware. For all aspects discussed, a comparison of pertinent analysis, ground test data, and flight data [1] will be given.

2015 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 480-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin-ichiro Nishida ◽  
◽  
Heihachiro Kamimura ◽  

<div class=""abs_img""> <img src=""[disp_template_path]/JRM/abst-image/00270005/03.jpg"" width=""300"" /> Artist concept of in-orbit assembly</div>In Earth orbit, a space telescope is free from any absorption or disturbances from the Earth's atmosphere. Therefore, a large space telescope is planned for the future. We discuss the assembly of a large telescope reflector performed by a robot arm. For the assembly work, positioning of the arm using visual servo control to colored markers is proposed. A ground test-bed is used to test the characteristics of the new image processing method for colored markers. The results of the tests are also given.


1997 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 761-776 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudio Maccone

AbstractSETI from space is currently envisaged in three ways: i) by large space antennas orbiting the Earth that could be used for both VLBI and SETI (VSOP and RadioAstron missions), ii) by a radiotelescope inside the Saha far side Moon crater and an Earth-link antenna on the Mare Smythii near side plain. Such SETIMOON mission would require no astronaut work since a Tether, deployed in Moon orbit until the two antennas landed softly, would also be the cable connecting them. Alternatively, a data relay satellite orbiting the Earth-Moon Lagrangian pointL2would avoid the Earthlink antenna, iii) by a large space antenna put at the foci of the Sun gravitational lens: 1) for electromagnetic waves, the minimal focal distance is 550 Astronomical Units (AU) or 14 times beyond Pluto. One could use the huge radio magnifications of sources aligned to the Sun and spacecraft; 2) for gravitational waves and neutrinos, the focus lies between 22.45 and 29.59 AU (Uranus and Neptune orbits), with a flight time of less than 30 years. Two new space missions, of SETI interest if ET’s use neutrinos for communications, are proposed.


Author(s):  
Carolina Soroceanu

In our daily existence, troubled and changing, economy occupies a large space. Increasingly, more economic concepts such as public budget and public expenditures enter within our daily language. Increasingly, we are assailed with data information about the sustainability of expenditure, about how and when budget allows us to make certain expenditures. Thus, an insight into the functional mechanism and a public institutional budget is always a topical issue. About the budget, as a financial and management tool of a public, we can not discuss without reference to economic classifiers public spending. Budget public institution acquires through economic classification of expenditure substance and reality.


2011 ◽  
Vol 80-81 ◽  
pp. 767-773
Author(s):  
Hai Gang Sun ◽  
Yong Zhou

Thermal design and the working temperature control have been a key factor in the design of electronic devices and system. In this paper, a sort of heat sink collocated with high-power IGBT module, which is commonly used in car-carrying motor control system, is designed based on thermal analysis by means of CFD simulation and computer-aided analyzing, also the influence relations of structure parameters with thermal performance are studied. With thermal control as the overall design objective, structure parameters of heat sink are determined according to the obtained relations. Further, thermal performance of the designed heat sink is simulated and analyzed in CFD software to examine the validity of the design result. In this way, a method of thermal analyzing and structure parameter design for heat sink, which is proved as an efficacious approach, is introduced and can be used to thermal design and analysis for similar products.


2016 ◽  
Vol 61 (4) ◽  
pp. 917-935 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wiesław Bujakowski ◽  
Antoni Barbacki ◽  
Maciej Miecznik ◽  
Leszek Pająk ◽  
Robert Skrzypczak

Abstract The main objective of this study was to develop a spatial temperature distribution of the Karkonosze Pluton to indicate optimum locations for HDR systems at drillable depth. HDR geothermal technology makes it possible to extract heat from the Earth in areas where no hydro-geothermal resources are present. To produce electricity in a binary cycle, system temperatures of > 100°C are usually required. In this paper, the authors have analysed the potential opportunities for applying HDR technology in the area of the Karkonosze Pluton, which is regarded as an optimum location for the application of the HDR concept (due to the potential for stimulation offered by the mechanical properties of the granites, radiogenic heat production, modern tectonic activity, and the thickness of the pluton). The model used in the analysis, which takes into account a hypothetical assessment of the manner and paths of fluid migration within the pluton, provides an insight into the spatial distribution of subsurface temperatures. It thus allows the location of relatively shallow high-temperature zones, which are optimal for the efficient application of HDR technology, to be identified. With respect to this technology, the Szklarska Poręba area and the NE part of the pluton seem to be better targets than the Cieplice central area, where the model indicated much lower temperatures (e.g. at a depth of 5,000 m, estimated temperatures in the vicinity of Szklarska Poręba were about 185°C and in the vicinity of Cieplice they were about 140°C).


Author(s):  
Renata Colwell

In the wake of the English Civil Wars of the 1640s, increased religious tolerance gave rise to unprecedented religious radicalism. While most emerging religious sects adopted unorthodoxinterpretations of the Bible, some sects were more radical than others. The Diggers, led by Gerrard Winstanley, were unique in that their biblically inspired focus on private property’s inherent corruption drove them to establish an agricultural commune in Surrey in 1649. By setting an example for the rest of the world and encouraging others to adopt their methods, they hoped to ultimately restore the Earth to a state of ‘Common Treasury.’ Drawing on scriptural precedent and personal interpretation of the Bible, Winstanley offered an eloquent, politically charged justification for the Diggers’ program of communal living in The True Levellers Standard (1649), which became the Digger manifesto. It pointedly critiquedseventeenth-century English society, had both a positive and negative impact on the Diggers’ reception at the time, and survived the movement’s violent suppression and subsequent collapse. Today, it continues to offer great insight into the origins, development and fate of the Digger movement, while at the same time inspiring modern scholars to delve deeper into the movement’s significance, and raising questions about property and equality that remain highly relevant in this day and age. 


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justinas Kilpys ◽  
Laurynas Jukna ◽  
Edvinas Stonevičius ◽  
Rasa Šimanauskienė ◽  
Linas Bevainis

Title in English: Earth Observations from Space. There are more than 150 environmental satellites orbiting the Earth, and they are constantly monitoring its surface and the processes happening on it. This textbook offers an introduction to the physical concepts of satellite observations, describes how sensor data is transformed into information about the Earth’s surface and how it can be applied. The scientific background of satellite remote sensing is illustrated using examples from applications in agriculture, forestry, environmental monitoring, disaster risk management, and many other areas. Book provides insight into how satellite remote sensing is used to explore and monitor natural and anthropocentric processes on the Earth and serves as introduction to the practical remote sensing.


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