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BOLAS: A Canadian-US Ionospheric Tether MissionEveryday, international broadcasters, ships, and aircraft use a naturally conducting atmospheric layer, the ionosphere, to reflect communications signals over the Earth's horizon. A better understanding of this layer, with its irregularities, instabilities, and dynamics, would improve communications transmission and reception. This atmospheric layer is also a lens that can distort signal transmissions from communications, navigation, and surveillance satellites. The ionosphere over Canada and other high latitude countries can carry large currents and is particularly dynamic, so that a scientific understanding of this layer is critical. The BOLAS (Bistatic Observations using Low Altitude Satellites) mission would characterize reflective and transmissive properties of the ionosphere by flying two satellites, each with identical HF receivers, dipole antennas, particle probes, and GPS receivers. The satellites would be connected by a non-conducting tether to maintain a 100 m separation, and would cartwheel in the orbit plane to spatially survey the ionosphere. The six-month mission would fly in a high inclination, 350 x 600 km orbit, and would be active during passes over the auroral region of Canada. This paper discusses the system requirements and architecture, spacecraft and operations concepts, and mission design, as well as team organization, international cooperation and the scientific and technological benefits that are expected.
Document ID
19970027266
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Tyc, George
(Bristol Aerospace Ltd. Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada)
Vigneron, Frank
(Canadian Space Agency Saint Hubert, Quebec Canada)
Jablonski, Alexander
(Canadian Space Agency Saint Hubert, Quebec Canada)
James, H. Gordon
(Communications Research Centre Ottawa, Ontario Canada)
Carrington, Connie
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL United States)
Rupp, Charles
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL United States)
Date Acquired
August 17, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1997
Publication Information
Publication: The Sixth Alumni Conference of the International Space University
Subject Category
Law, Political Science And Space Policy
Accession Number
97N26296
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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