Asymmetric Electrostatic Radiation Shielding for SpacecraftA paper describes the types, sources, and adverse effects of energetic-particle radiation in interplanetary space, and explores a concept of using asymmetric electrostatic shielding to reduce the amount of such radiation impinging on spacecraft. Typically, such shielding would include a system of multiple inflatable, electrically conductive spheres deployed in clusters in the vicinity of a spacecraft on lightweight structures that would maintain the spheres in a predetermined multipole geometry. High-voltage generators would maintain the spheres at potential differences chosen in conjunction with the multipole geometry so that the resulting multipole field would gradually divert approaching energetic atomic nuclei from a central region occupied by the spacecraft. The spheres nearest the center would be the most positive, so as to repel the positively charged impinging nuclei from the center. At the same time, the monopole potential of the overall spacecraft-and-shielding system would be made negative so as to repel thermal electrons. The paper presents results of computational simulations of energetic-particle trajectories and shield efficiency for a trial system of 21 spheres arranged in three clusters in an overall linear quadrupole configuration. Further development would be necessary to make this shielding concept practical.
Document ID
20110015112
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Other - NASA Tech Brief
Authors
Metzger, Philip T. (NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Youngquist, Robert C. (NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Lane, John E. (ASRC Aerospace Corp. Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)