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Hypervelocity impact microfoil perforations in the LEO space environment (LDEF, MAP AO-023 experiment)

Authors :
Mcdonnell, J. A. M
Stevenson, T. J
Source :
NASA. Langley Research Center, LDEF: 69 Months in Space. First Post-Retrieval Symposium, Part 1.
Publication Year :
1992
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1992.

Abstract

The Microabrasion Foil Experiment comprises arrays of frames, each supporting two layers of closely spaced metallic foils and a back-stop plate. The arrays, deploying aluminum and brass foil ranging from 1.5 to some 30 microns were exposed for 5.78 years on NASA's LDEF at a mean altitude of 458 km. They were deployed on the North, South, East, West, and Space pointing faces; results presented comprise the perforation rates for each location as a function of foil thickness. Initial results refer primarily to aluminum of 5 microns thickness or greater. This penetration distribution, comprising 2,342 perforations in total, shows significantly differing characteristics for each detector face. The anisotropy confirms, incorporating the dynamics of particulate orbital mechanics, the dominance of incorporating extraterrestrial particulates penetrating thicknesses greater than 20 microns in Al foil, yielding fluxes compatible with hyperbolic geocentric velocities. For thinner foils, a disproportionate increase in flux of particles on the East, North, and South faces shows the presence of orbital particulates which exceed the extraterrestrial component perforation rate at 5 micron foil thickness by a factor of approx. 4.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
NASA. Langley Research Center, LDEF: 69 Months in Space. First Post-Retrieval Symposium, Part 1
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19920014069
Document Type :
Report