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1.
U.S. Space Radioisotope Power Systems and Applications: Past, Present and Future
Online Source: Click to View PDF File [PDF Size: 8.4 MB]
Author: Cataldo, Robert L.; Bennett, Gary L.
Abstract: Radioisotope power systems (RPS) have been essential to the U.S. exploration of outer space. RPS
have two primary uses: electrical power and thermal power. To provide electrical power, the RPS uses the heat produced by the natural decay of a radioisotope (e.g., plutonium-238 in U.S. RPS) to drive a converter (e.g., thermoelectric elements or Stirling linear alternator). As a thermal power source the heat is conducted to whatever component on the spacecraft needs to be kept warm; this heat can be produced by a radioisotope heater unit (RHU) or by using the excess heat of a radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG). As of 2010, the U.S. has launched 41 RTGs on 26 space systems. These space systems have ranged from navigational satellites to challenging outer planet missions such as Pioneer 10/11, Voyager 1/2, Galileo, Ulysses, Cassini and the New Horizons mission to Pluto. In the fall of 2011, NASA plans to launch the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) that will employ the new Multi-Mission Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator (MMRTG) as the principal power source. Hundreds of radioisotope heater units (RHUs) have been launched to provide warmth to Apollo 11, used to provide heating of critical components in a seismic experiment package, Pioneer 10/11, Voyager 1/2, Galileo, Cassini, Mars Pathfinder, MER rovers, etc. to provide temperature control to critical spacecraft electronics and other mechanical devices such as propulsion system propellant valves. A radioisotope (electrical) power source or system (RPS) consists of three basic elements: (1) the radioisotope heat source that provides the thermal power, (2) the converter that transforms the thermal power into electrical power and (3) the heat rejection radiator. Figure 1 illustrates the basic features of an RPS. The idea of a radioisotope power source follows closely after the early investigations of radioactivity by researchers such as Henri Becquerel (1852-1908), Marie Curie (1867-1935), Pierre Curie (1859-1906) and R. J. Strut. Almost 100 years ago, in 1913, English physicist H. G. J. Moseley (1887-1915) constructed the first nuclear battery using a vacuum flask and 20 mCi of radium (Corliss and Harvey, 1964, Proceedings of the Royal Society, 1913). After World War II, serious interest in radioisotope power systems in the U.S. was sparked by studies of space satellites such as North American Aviation s 1947 report on nuclear space power and the RAND Corporation s 1949 report on radioisotope power. (Greenfield, 1947, Gendler and Kock, 1949). Radioisotopes were also considered in early studies of nuclear-powered aircraft (Corliss and Harvey, 1964). In 1951, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) signed several contracts to study a 1-kWe space power plant using reactors or radioisotopes. Several of these studies, which were completed in 1952, recommended the use of RPS. (Corliss and Harvey, 1964). In 1954, the RAND Corporation issued the summary report of the Project Feedback military satellite study in which radioisotope power was considered (Lipp and Salter, 1954, RAND). Paralleling these studies, in 1954, K. C. Jordan and J. H. Birden of the AEC s Mound Laboratory conceived and built the first RTG using chromel-constantan thermocouples and a polonium-210 (210Po or Po-210) radioisotope heat source (see Figure 2). While the power produced (1.8 mWe) was low by today s standards, this first RTG showed the feasibility of RPS. A second thermal battery was built with more Po-210, producing 9.4 mWe. Jordan and Birden concluded that the Po-210 thermal battery would have about ten times the energy of ordinary dry cells of the same mass (Jordan and Birden, 1954). The heat source consisted of a 1-cm-diameter sphere of 57 Ci (1.8 Wt) of Po-210 inside a capsule of nickel-coated cold-rolled steel all inside a container of Lucite. The thermocouples were silver-soldered chromel-constantan. The thermal battery produced 1.8 mWe.
NASA Center: Glenn Research Center
Publication Year: 2011
Document ID: 20120000731
Report/Patent Number: E-18060
Updated/Added to NTRS: Feb 03, 2012
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2.
Properties of selected radioisotopes. A bibliography, part 1 - Unclassified literature
Online Source: Click to View PDF File [PDF Size: 11.7 MB]
Author: Epstein, J.; Harris, D.
Abstract: Nuclear, chemical, and physical properties of nine radioactive isotopes - annotated bibliography
NASA Center: Goddard Space Flight Center
Publication Year: 1968
Document ID: 19680020487
Accession Number: 68N29959
Report/Patent Number: NASA-SP-7031
Updated/Added to NTRS: Mar 04, 2010
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3.
Study of interaction of low dose power source radiation fields with selected space scientific instruments Quarterly progress report
Online Source: Click to View PDF File [PDF Size: 15.0 MB]
Author: Endres, G. W. R.; Haverfield, A. J.
Abstract: Interaction of low dose power source radiation fields with selected space scientific instruments
NASA Center: Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Publication Year: 1969
Document ID: 19700005268
Accession Number: 70N14572
Report/Patent Number: NASA-CR-107447, Y-49607
Updated/Added to NTRS: Jan 14, 2008
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4.
Polonium-210 and plutonium-238 radioisotope shielding for post-Apollo missions
Online Source: Click to View PDF File [PDF Size: 17.6 MB]
Author: Hagey, G. L.
Abstract: Apollo postflight analysis of polonium 210 and plutonium 238 radiation shielding for power supplies
NASA Center: Johnson Space Center
Publication Year: 1966
Document ID: 19700026329
Accession Number: 70N35645
Report/Patent Number: NASA-TM-X-65001
Updated/Added to NTRS: Jun 09, 2011
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5.
High energy proton damage in silicon surface barrier detectors
Online Source: Click to View PDF File [PDF Size: 1.3 MB]
Author: Rind, E.; Singh, J. J.
Abstract: High energy proton damage in silicon surface barrier detectors
NASA Center: Langley Research Center
Publication Year: 1968
Document ID: 19680015188
Accession Number: 68N24660
Report/Patent Number: NASA-TN-D-4528
Updated/Added to NTRS: Aug 26, 2008
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6.
Seasonal variations of Pb-210 and Po-210 concentrations in an oligotrophic lake
Online Source: doi:10.1016/0016-7037(84)90386-7
Author: Talbot, R. W.; Andren, A. W.
Abstract: In order to examine spatial and temporal variability during the seasonal cycle of the oligotrophic
Crystal Lake, Wisconsin, vertical distribution measurements of Pb-210 and Po-210 in both the dissolved and particulate phases were conducted. Mass balance considerations indicate that the removal rates of the two isotopes from the water column to the sediment vary temporally by nearly an order of magnitude. The mean removal residence time was estimated to be 0.095 yr for Pb-210 and 0.26 yr for Po-210, suggesting a difference in the extent of water column recycling. Calculations indicate a cyclic response of the water column Po-210 inventory which corresponds to successive time periods when there were net losses or gains; this response may be due to rapid biological removal and subsequent release from the sediment of freshly deposited Po-210.
NASA Center: Langley Research Center
Publication Year: 1984
Document ID: 19850034327
Accession Number: 85A16478
Updated/Added to NTRS: Aug 18, 2011
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7.
Radon-222 in the lunar atmosphere.
Author: Brodzinski, R. L.
Abstract: In 1969 Yeh and Van Allen set upper limits for the alpha-particle emissivity of the moon. The
equilibrium surface activity reported by Turkevich et al. (1970) for each alpha active Rn-222 daughter at Mare Tranquillitatis cannot be reconciled with existing diffusion theory. The data, therefore, suggest that earth based diffusion constants are not applicable in the vacuum conditions of the moon, or that there are substantial variations in the uranium content of the moon over relatively small distances.
NASA Center: NASA (Unspecified Center)
Publication Year: 1972
Document ID: 19720056195
Accession Number: 72A39861
Updated/Added to NTRS: Aug 12, 2011
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8.
Examination of returned Surveyor III camera visor for alpha radioactivity
Author: Economou, T. E.; Turkevich, A. L.
Abstract: Alpha radioactivity in Surveyor 3 camera visor, calculating upper limit of Po 210 at equilibrium of
Oceanus Procellarum
NASA Center: NASA (Unspecified Center)
Publication Year: 1971
Document ID: 19710063115
Accession Number: 71A43812
Updated/Added to NTRS: Aug 12, 2011
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9.
Radon emanation from the moon - Spatial and temporal variability.
Author: Gorenstein, P.; Golub, L.; Bjorkholm, P.
Abstract: Observations of Rn-222 and Po-210 on the lunar surface with the orbiting Apollo alpha particle
spectrometer reveal a number of features in their spatial distribution and indicate the existence of time variations in lunar radon emission. Localized Rn-222 or Po-210 around the craters Aristarchus and Grimaldi and the edges of virtually all maria indicates time varying radon emission and suggests a correlation between alpha 'hot spots' and sites of transient optical events observed from the earth. In a gross sense, the slower variations of Rn-222 seem to correlate with the distribution of gamma activity.
NASA Center: NASA (Unspecified Center)
Publication Year: 1973
Document ID: 19730051231
Accession Number: 73A36033
Updated/Added to NTRS: Aug 12, 2011
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10.
Detection of a nonuniform distribution of polonium-210 on the moon with the Apollo 16 alpha particle spectrometer.
Author: Bjorkholm, P.; Golub, L.; Gorenstein, P.
Abstract: No Abstract Available
NASA Center: NASA (Unspecified Center)
Publication Year: 1973
Document ID: 19730047464
Accession Number: 73A32266
Updated/Added to NTRS: Aug 12, 2011
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