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Ground Testing and Flight Demonstration of Charge Management of Insulated Test Masses Using UV LED Electron Photoemission

Authors :
Mohammed Bin Othman
Dohy Faied
Mohammed I. Al-Majed
Mohammed Al Harbi
Bandar Bin Qasim
Kuok Ling
Sasha Buchman
D.B. DeBra
Belgacem Jaroux
Abdulrahman S. Alfauwaz
Robert L. Byer
Badr Bin Salamah
Karthik Balakrishnan
Badr Al-Nassban
Badr Al Suwaidan
Shailendhar Saraf
Faisal Alaqeel
Chin Yang Lui
John Hanson
Abdullah AlRashed
Michael Soulage
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
arXiv, 2016.

Abstract

The UV LED mission demonstrates the precise control of the potential of electrically isolated test masses that is essential for the operation of space accelerometers and drag free sensors. Accelerometers and drag free sensors were and remain at the core of geodesy, aeronomy, and precision navigation missions as well as gravitational science experiments and gravitational wave observatories. Charge management using photoelectrons generated by the 254 nm UV line of Hg was first demonstrated on Gravity Probe B and is presently part of the LISA Pathfinder technology demonstration. The UV LED mission and prior ground testing demonstrates that AlGaN UV LEDs operating at 255 nm are superior to Mercury vapor lamps because of their smaller size, lower draw, higher dynamic range, and higher control authority. We show flight data from a small satellite mission on a Saudi Satellite that demonstrates AC charge control (UV LEDs and bias are AC modulated with adjustable relative phase) between a spherical test mass and its housing. The result of the mission is to bring the UV LED device Technology Readiness Level (TRL) to TRL 9 and the charge management system to TRL 7. We demonstrate the ability to control the test mass potential on an 89 mm diameter spherical test mass over a 20 mm gap in a drag free system configuration. The test mass potential was measured with an ultra high impedance contact probe. Finally, the key electrical and optical characteristics of the UV LEDs showed less than 7.5 percent change in performance after 12 months in orbit.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 21 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e91daf875769f28ab55a18992a12ed3c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1607.03564