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Free-floating experiments in orbiter and space stationManned spacecraft will never be free of acceleration perturbations due to necessary motions of crewmembers. However, in most cases, the perturbations can be minimized or even isolated from sensitive experiments when required. The principal disturbances and methods of isolation are described. As the crew moves about the spacecraft, no external forces are applied and the average acceleration remains near zero. External force will be exerted when jets are fired for spacecraft attitude control or translation, and these must be transferred to the microgravity experiments. Transitory acceleration and vibration are produced by crew and equipment. The most significant on Orbiter have been wall push-offs used for body translation within the spacecraft, the exercise conducted on a treadmill within the middeck area, closing doors of stowage compartments and the vibration of some machinery, such as a sample centrifuge. For short periods of perhaps a few minutes, crew and equipment motion can be largely inhibited, but not for much longer intervals. It may be necessary to mount especially sensitive experiments on an isolation table, which can greatly reduce the acceleration transferred to the experiment. Either weak mechanical springs or, even better, a computer-controlled electromagnetic suspension can be used to effectively insulate the table from vibration at frequencies above about 0.01 Hz. Another option is to free-float an experiment table within the spacecraft. All of the above-mentioned perturbations can be eliminated for some minutes if the entire experiment package is allowed to free-float within the spacecraft until a wall contact is made. Package acceleration levels should be maintainable below 10(exp -8) g sub o in this way.
Document ID
19910003107
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Garriott, Owen K.
(EFFORT, Inc. Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1990
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center, Measurement and Characterization of the Acceleration Environment on Board the Space Station
Subject Category
Materials Processing
Accession Number
91N12420
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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