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E-Glider: Active Electrostatic Flight for Airless Body ExplorationThe environment near the surface of asteroids, comets, and the Moon is electrically charged due to the Sun's photoelectric bombardment and lofting dust, which follows the Sun illumination as the body spins. Chargeddust is ever present, in the form of dusty plasma, even at high altitudes, following the solar illumination. If abody with high surface resistivity is exposed to the solar wind and solar radiation, sun-exposed areas andshadowed areas become differentially charged. The E-Glider (Electrostatic Glider) is an enabling capability foroperation at airless bodies, a solution applicable to many types of in-situ mission concepts, which leverages thenatural environment. With the E-Glider, we transform a problem (spacecraft charging) into an enablingtechnology, i.e. a new form of mobility in microgravity environments using new mechanisms and maneuveringbased on the interaction of the vehicle with the environment. Consequently, the vision of the E-Glider is toenable global scale airless body exploration with a vehicle that uses, instead of avoids, the local electricallycharged environment. This platform directly addresses the "All Access Mobility" Challenge, one of the NASA'sSpace Technology Grand Challenges. Exploration of comets, asteroids, moons and planetary bodies is limitedby mobility on those bodies. The lack of an atmosphere, the low gravity levels, and the unknown surface soilproperties pose a very difficult challenge for all forms of know locomotion at airless bodies. This E-Gliderlevitates by extending thin, charged, appendages, which are also articulated to direct the levitation force in themost convenient direction for propulsion and maneuvering. The charging is maintained through continuouscharge emission. It lands, wherever it is most convenient, by retracting the appendages or by firing a cold-gasthruster, or by deploying an anchor. The wings could be made of very thin Au-coated Mylar film, which areelectrostatically inflated, and would provide the lift due to electrostatic repulsion with the naturally chargedasteroid surface. Since the E-glider would follow the Sun's illumination, the solar panels on the vehicle wouldconstantly charge a battery. Further articulation at the root of the lateral strands or inflated membrane wings,would generate a component of lift depending on the articulation angle, hence a selective maneuveringcapability which, to all effects, would lead to electrostatic (rather than aerodynamic) flight. Preliminarycalculations indicate that a 1 kg mass can be electrostatically levitated in a microgravity field with a 2 mdiameter electrostatically inflated ribbon structure at 19kV, hence the need for a "balloon-like" system. Due tothe high density and the photo-electron sheath and associate small Debye length, significant power is requiredto levitate even a few kilograms. The power required is in the kilo-Watt range to maintain a constant chargelevel.
Document ID
20190001187
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other
Authors
Quadrelli, Bruno M.
(Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Garrett, Henry
Castillo, Julie
Stoica, Adrian
Ono, Hiro
Schaub, Hanspeter
Christianson, Caleb
Kikuchi, Shota
Date Acquired
March 4, 2019
Publication Date
October 31, 2018
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
HQ-E-DAA-TN38957
HQ-E-DAA-TN62758
Report Number: HQ-E-DAA-TN38957
Report Number: HQ-E-DAA-TN62758
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNN12AA01C
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH15ZOA001N-NIAC_A3
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Keywords
Electrostatic Flight
Asteroids
Sun
Comets
Moon
Airless
Exploration
Glider
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