Understanding Microgravity and Microgravity Experiments
Microgravity: http://www.microgravity.nasa.gov/wimg.html
http://www.desc.med.vu.nl/Gravity_us.htm
BioTechnology: http://microgravity.msfc.nasa.gov/pcgBiot.html
Combustion http://microgravity.grc.nasa.gov/combustion/
Terminology: Gravity, Reduced Gravity, Microgravity, Free Fall, 'Zero G'
Simulation: Drop
Tower, Parabolic Flight, Sounding Rocket, Spaceflight
http://quest.nasa.gov/smore/background/microgravity/MGintro3.html
Random
Positioning Machine http://www.desc.med.vu.nl/RPM_us.htm
Clinorotation http://www.asgsb.org/newsletter/v15_1/clinorotation.html
, http://www.desc.med.vu.nl/Clinostat_Frames.htm
Perturbations: Atmospheric
Drag, Gravity Gradient, Vibrations, Thruster Firings, On-Board Activities,
Solar Wind
http://www.estec.esa.nl/spaceflight/map/ao/intro.htm
http://esapub.esrin.esa.it/bulletin/bullet85/klein85.htm
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Microgravity Simulation Courtesy of http://quest.nasa.gov/smore/background/microgravity/MGintro3.html):
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Drop towers accommodate large experiment packages, generally using a drop shield to contain the package and isolate the experiment from aerodynamic drag during free fall in the open environment. NASA's To begin a drop experiment, the experiment apparatus is placed in either a cylindrical or rectangular test vehicle that can carry experiment loads of up to 450 kilograms. The vehicle is suspended from a cap that encloses the upper end of the facility. Air is pumped out of the facility until a vacuum of 10 -2 torr is achieved. (Atmospheric pressure is 760 torr.) By doing so, the acceleration effects caused by aerodynamic drag on the vehicle are reduced to less than 10 -5 g. During the drop, cameras within the vehicle record the action and data is telemetered to recorders. |
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A
smaller facility for microgravity research is located at the Additional drop facilities of different sizes and for
different purposes are located at the NASA Field Centers and in other
countries. A 490-meter-deep vertical mine shaft in |
Airplanes
can achieve low-gravity for periods of about 25 seconds or longer. The
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A
typical flight lasts 2 to 3 hours and carries experiments and crewmembers
to a beginning altitude about 7 km above sea level. The plane climbs
rapidly at a 45-degree angle (pull up), traces a parabola (push-over), and
then descends at a 45-degree angle (pull out) (Figure 4). During the pull
up and pull out segments, crew and experiments experience between 2g and
2.5g. During the parabola, at altitudes ranging from 7.3 to 10.4
kilometers, net acceleration drops as low as 10 -3 g. On a
typical flight, 40 parabolic trajectories are flown. The gut-wrenching
sensations have earned the aircraft the nickname of "vomit
comet." NASA also operates a Learjet for low-gravity research out of
the |
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Small
rockets provide a third technology for creating microgravity. A sounding
rocket follows a suborbital trajectory and can
produce several minutes of free fall. The period of free fall exists during
its coast, after burn out, and before entering the atmosphere. Acceleration
levels are usually at or below 10 -5 g. NASA has employed many
different sounding rockets for microgravity experiments. The most
comprehensive series of launches used SPAR (Space Processing Application
Rocket) rockets for fluid physics, capillarity, liquid diffusion, containerless processing, and electrolysis experiments
from 1975 to 1981. The SPAR could lift 300 kg payloads into freefall
parabolic trajectories lasting four to six minutes (Figures 5, 6). |
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Although airplanes, drop facilities, and small rockets can be used to establish a microgravity environment, all of these laboratories share a common problem. After a few seconds or minutes of lowg, Earth gets in the way and the free fall stops. In spite of this limitation, much can be learned about fluid dynamics and mixing, liquid-gas surface interactions, and crystallization and macromolecular structure. But to conduct longer term experiments (days, weeks, months, and years), it is necessary to travel into space and orbit Earth. Having more time available for experiments means that slower processes and more subtle effects can be investigated.
To see how it is possible to establish microgravity conditions for long periods of time, it is first necessary to understand what keeps a spacecraft in orbit. Ask any group of students or adults what keeps satellites and Space Shuttles in orbit and you will probably get a variety of answers. Two common answers are: "The rocket engines keep firing to hold it up." and "There is no gravity in space."
Although the first answer is theoretically possible, the path followed by the spacecraft would technically not be an orbit. Other than the altitude involved and the specific means of exerting an upward force, there would be little difference between a spacecraft with its engines constantly firing and an airplane flying around the world. In the case of the satellite, it would just not be possible to provide it with enough fuel to maintain its altitude for more than a few minutes.
The second answer is also wrong. In a previous section, we discussed that Isaac Newton proved that the circular paths of the planets through space was due to gravity's presence, not its absence.
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This is how the Space Shuttle stays in orbit. It is launched in a trajectory that arcs above Earth so that the orbiter is traveling at the right speed to keep it falling while maintaining a constant altitude above the surface. For example, if the Shuttle climbs to a 320-kilometer-high orbit, it must travel at a speed of about 27,740 kilometers per hour to achieve a stable orbit. At that speed and altitude, the Shuttle's falling path will be parallel to the curvature of Earth. Because the Space Shuttle is freefalling around Earth and upper atmospheric friction is extremely low, a microgravity environment is established.
Orbiting spacecraft provide ideal laboratories for microgravity research. As on airplanes, scientists can fly with the experiments that are on the spacecraft. Because the experiments are tended, they do not have to be fully automatic in operation. A malfunction in an experiment conducted with a drop tower or small rocket means a loss of data or complete failure. In orbiting spacecraft, crewmembers can make repairs so that there is little or no loss of data. They can also make on-orbit modifications in experiments to gather more diverse data.
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Perhaps
the greatest advantage of orbiting spacecraft for microgravity research is
the amount of time during which microgravity conditions can be achieved.
Experiments lasting for more than two weeks are possible with the Space
Shuttle. When the International Space Station becomes operational, the time
available for experiments will stretch to months. The International Space
Station will provide a manned microgravity laboratory facility unrivaled by
any on Earth (Figure 8). |
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