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Remote Recession Sensing of Ablative Heat Shield Materials
Author(s) -
Michael Winter,
Mairead Stackpoole,
Anuscheh Nawaz,
Gregory L. Gonzales,
Thanh S. Ho
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
22nd aerospace sciences meeting
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2014-1151
Subject(s) - heat shield , instrumentation (computer programming) , charring , spacecraft , remote sensing , shield , aerospace engineering , materials science , environmental science , computer science , engineering , geology , composite material , petrology , operating system
Material recession and charring are two major processes determining the performance of ablative heat shield materials. Even in ground testing, the characterization of these two mechanisms relies on measurements of material thickness before and after testing, thus providing only information integrated over the test time. For recession measurements, optical methods such as imaging the sample surface during testing are under investigation but require high alignment and instrument effort, therefore being not established as a standard measurement method. For char depth measurements, the most common method so far consists in investigation of sectioned samples after testing or in the case of Stardust where core extractions were performed to determine char information. In flight, no reliable recession measurements are available, except total recession after recovering the heat shield on ground. Developments of mechanical recession sensors have been started but require substantial on board instrumentation adding mass and complexity. In this work, preliminary experiments to evaluate the feasibility of remote sensing of material recession and possibly char depth through optically observing the emission signatures of seeding materials in the post shock plasma is investigated. It is shown that this method can provide time resolved recession measurements without the necessity of accurate alignment procedures of the optical set-up and without any instrumentation on board of a spacecraft. Furthermore, recession data can be obtained without recovering flight hardware which would be a huge benefit for inexpensive heat shield material testing on board of small re-entry probes, e.g. on new micro-satellite re-entry probes as a possible future application of Cubesats or RBR

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