DocumentCode
586475
Title
VEGA launch vehicle upper stage re-entry survivability analysis
Author
Battie, F. ; Fossati, Thomas ; Gallucci, S. ; Volpi, Michele
Author_Institution
Syst. Data Anal. in E.L.V. S.p.A., Colleferro, Italy
fYear
2012
fDate
2-5 Oct. 2012
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
A key task in launch vehicle (LV) system design process consists in the estimation of upper stage fragmentation during atmospheric re-entry once accomplished the launcher mission, and the related probability of making on-ground casualties. According to international policy for space debris mitigation, VEGA upper stage AVUM re-entry from its final orbit is analyzed by means of numerical tools, in order to identify which objects are demised during atmospheric re-entry and which ones are able to withstand aerothermal loads impacting on ground. The logic is based on parent/child concept: initially the S/C is modelled as one parent object. The parent object virtually contains all other internal components of the S/C. The output of the analysis comprises the mass, cross-section, velocity, incident angle of the surviving fragments and their casualty area. Final casualty risk assessment is then performed starting from the survivability analysis results achieved and compared to applicable regulations. Application on Vega LV maiden flight provide practical results.
Keywords
risk management; space vehicles; VEGA launch vehicle upper stage re-entry survivability analysis; VEGA upper stage AVUM re-entry; aerothermal loads; atmospheric re-entry; international policy; launch vehicle system design process; launcher mission; numerical tools; on-ground casualties; risk assessment; space debris mitigation; upper stage fragmentation estimation; Atmospheric modeling; Europe; Materials; Object oriented modeling; Orbits; Space vehicles; Trajectory; Casualties; Fragmentation; Safety; Survivability; VEGA;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Satellite Telecommunications (ESTEL), 2012 IEEE First AESS European Conference on
Conference_Location
Rome
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-4687-0
Electronic_ISBN
978-1-4673-4686-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ESTEL.2012.6400200
Filename
6400200
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