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Short-duration low-gravity experiments - Time scales, challenges and resultsShort-duration low-gravity experiments can be conducted either in drop tubes and drop towers, or on sounding rockets and aircraft on ballistic trajectories. While these facilities offer more frequent flight opportunities and higher cost effectiveness than orbiting spacecraft, their relatively short low-gravity times are often perceived as limiting their utility to only a narrow range of applications and research areas. In this review it is shown, based on scaling laws for diffusive transport of momentum, species and heat, radiative heat transfer and capillarity-driven motion, that with proper consideration of the characteristic length scales, a host of phenomena can be meaningfully investigated during a few seconds. This usefulness of short-duration low-gravity facilities is illustrated with numerous results of recent studies of solidification, combustion, transport in multiphase systems, statics and dynamics of liquid surfaces, magnetic Benard convection, fluid management, transport properties and the graviperception in cells.
Document ID
19950031872
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Rosenberger, F.
(Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL United States)
Date Acquired
August 16, 2013
Publication Date
September 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: Microgravity Science and Technology
Volume: 6
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0938-0108
Subject Category
Materials Processing
Accession Number
95A63471
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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