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Prototype Development of a Variable Altitude Venus AerobotThis paper presents the design methodology and results from the first subscale prototype jointly developed by JPL and Near Space Corporation for a variable altitude Venus aerobot. This vehicle is based on the principle of a two-part balloon for which pumping helium gas between the balloons can modulate buoyancy and thereby control the altitude of the vehicle. The intended mission application at Venus is a cloud-level exploration across an altitude range of 52 to 62 kilometers for weeks or months, circumnavigating the planet multiple times and carrying an approximately 100 kg payload module containing all scientific instruments, avionics and other vehicle support systems. The first prototype is approximately one-third scale (4 m diameter) and serves as a proof-of-concept test article allowing for evaluation of manufacturing approaches and laboratory testing to evaluate performance. Two key design features of the prototype as built are the use of Teflon film on the outside of the balloon to protect it from the sulfuric acid aerosols in the Venusian atmosphere and second surface metallization of that film to reflect most incident sunlight and thereby limit diurnal temperature and the associated temperature-driven pressure fluctuations. This prototyping effort has been complemented with a detailed vehicle simulation activity that incorporates the relevant balloon physics and thereby models the expected dynamic behavior of the aerobot in both the Earth and Venus atmospheres. Data obtained in laboratory tests of the prototype have been used to validate, verify and update that simulation model as described in the paper.
Document ID
20230006934
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
External Source(s)
Authors
Turner, Caleb
Lachenmeier, Tim
Izraelevitz, Jacob S.
Aiazzi, Carolina
Krishnamoorthy, Siddharth
Schutte, Aaron
Pauken, Michael T.
Hall, Jeffery
Date Acquired
August 2, 2021
Publication Date
August 2, 2021
Publication Information
Publisher: Pasadena, CA: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 2021
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Technical Review

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