DocumentCode :
1436920
Title :
Comparison of spacecraft charging environments at the Earth, Jupiter, and Saturn
Author :
Garrett, Henry B. ; Hoffman, Alan R.
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume :
28
Issue :
6
fYear :
2000
fDate :
12/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
2048
Lastpage :
2057
Abstract :
Studies of the Earth with the ATS-5, ATS-6, and SCATHA spacecraft led to the development of several simple tools for predicting the potentials to be expected on a spacecraft in the space environment. These tools have been used to estimate the expected levels of worst case charging at Jupiter and Saturn for the Galileo and the Cassini spacecraft missions. This paper reviews those results and puts them in the context of the design issues addressed by each mission including the spacecraft design mitigation strategies adopted to limit differential charging. The model shows that shadowed surfaces in Earth orbit can reach ~25 kV or higher in worst case environments. For Galileo, spacecraft-to-space potentials of ~900 V were predicted in shadow. Since such potentials could produce possible discharges and could effect low energy plasma measurements, the outer surface of Galileo was designed to rigid conductivity requirements. Even though the surface of Galileo is not entirely conducting, after 27 orbits no adverse effects due to surface charging aside from limited effects on low energy plasma measurements have been reported. The Saturnian environment results in spacecraft potentials to space in shadow of ~100 V or less. Although the overall surface of the Cassini spacecraft was not entirely conducting and grounded, it is shown that only in the most extreme conditions, is it expected that Cassini will experience any effects of surface charging at Saturn
Keywords :
Jupiter; Saturn; astronomical instruments; ionosphere; magnetosphere; planetary atmospheres; radiation belts; space vehicles; spacecraft charging; ATS-5; ATS-6; Cassini; Earth; Galileo; Jupiter; SCATHA; Saturn; artificial satellite; astronomical spacecraft; charging environment; electric field; electric potential; ionosphere; magnetosphere; model; planetary atmosphere; radiation belt; space environment; space vehicle; space weather; spacecraft charging; Earth; Jupiter; Magnetosphere; Plasma measurements; Propulsion; Saturn; Space charge; Space vehicles; Surface charging; Surface discharges;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0093-3813
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/27.902232
Filename :
902232
Link To Document :
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