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Observations of thermal ion influxes about the space shuttleIon mass spectrometer measurements made as part of the University of Iowa's Plasma Diagnostic Package on the STS-3 and Spacelab 2 Space Shuttle missions sampled a variety of ion composition and collected ion current responses to gas emissions from the vehicle. The only other shuttle ion measurements were made by an Air Force Geophysics Laboratory (AFGL) quadrupole spectrometer flown on STS-4. Gas emissions change the distribution of the incoming plasma through scattering and charge transfer processes. A background flux of contaminant ion species (mostly relating to water) always exists in the near vicinity of the shuttle with a magnitude which is dependent on the look direction of the spectrometer but which varies differently with changes in the angle of attack than that of the ambient ions. There is a near shuttle wake cavity in the contaminant ion distributions which has a different spatial configuration than the wake of the ambient ions. Although water dumps produce the most persistent ion perturbations, the sources for ion current modification were best delineated from measurements made when only one or two of the Reaction Control System thrusters fired for a relatively long duration. Contaminant ion perturbations associated with such firings were observed to persist for the order of a second after the cessation of the firings. The dense thruster plumes are efficient collisional, charge exchange barriers to the passage of ambient ions. Collected ion current perturbations were more evident for firings of the rear verniers, whose plumes scatter off projecting surfaces, than for the nose thrusters. The effect of the Vernier firings was found to depend not only on the location and attitude of the spectrometer with respect to the shuttle and thruster plume direction, but also on the orientation of the local magnetic field with respect to the shuttle velocity.
Document ID
19910008414
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Grebowsky, Joe M.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD., United States)
Schaefer, A.
(Marquette Univ. Milwaukee, WI., United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1990
Publication Information
Publication: NASA, Marshall Space Flight Center, Current Collection from Space Plasmas
Subject Category
Plasma Physics
Accession Number
91N17727
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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