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Impact of atmospheric uncertainties and viscous interaction effects on the performance of aeroassisted orbital transfer vehicles
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Citations
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References
1984
Year
EngineeringAerospace EngineeringAtmospheric ScienceSpace VehiclesAerospace SimulationAtmospheric UncertaintiesSystems EngineeringAerodynamicsAotv ReturnAerospace SystemPropulsionApplied AerodynamicsHigh AltitudesOff-nominal AtmospheresViscous Interaction Effects
Simulations of aerobraking trajectories of aeroassisted orbital transfer vehicles (AOTV's) returning from geosynchronous orbit were analyzed to examine the effects of high-altitude viscous interactions and off-nominal atmospheres on AOTV return weight, heating, and loads performance. Viscous interaction effects encountered at high altitudes had little detrimental effect on the return weight capabilities for AOTV's representing a range of lift/drag ratios. Most of the AOTV return weight increase over an all-propulsive OTV occurred for a low lift/drag ratio. Smaller increases in return weight were observed for higher lift/drag ratios, at the expense of significantly higher heating and aerodynamic loads. Off-nominal atmospheres based on Shuttle-derived data and multipliers on a U.S. Standard Atmosphere were considered. AOTV's intended for entry under standard atmospheric conditions either deorbited during the pass through the off-nominal atmospheres or missed the target phasing orbit by wide margins. The AOTV's could successfully negotiate these atmospheres when new bank-angle histories were implemented with little loss and sometimes with a gain in return weight.
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