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![]() Record Set for Space Laser Communication By Ker Than, 05 January 2006 In late May of 2005, scientists used the spacecraft's Mercury Laser Altimeter (MLA), an instrument designed to map Mercury's surface, to exchange laser pulses with NASA's Goddard Geophysical and Astronomical Observatory in Maryland. MESSENGER was approximately 15 million miles (25 million km) away at the time. The experiment, reported today, marks the first successful back-and-forth exchange of laser signals between Earth and space. The record-setting effort is described in the Jan. 6 issue of the journal Science. Does anyone know what frequency light they used for this? Also how big is the beam spot at earth? I am guessing much bigger than the whole earth? |
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In article ,
rk wrote: Does anyone know what frequency light they used for this? Also how big is the beam spot at earth? I am guessing much bigger than the whole earth? The best information I can find on the www is he http://optics.org/articles/ole/9/9/2/1 Supplementary information for the published paper can be found at http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/311/5757/53/DC1. Both lasers were at 1064nm, probably diode-pumped Nd:YAG lasers like the ones in the Clementine and NEAR lidars. If I've done the arithmetic correctly, the spot size at the test distance (about 24_Mkm) was around 2000_km. They scanned the spacecraft slowly over a raster pattern, partly because the beam was not big enough to cover Earth and partly because spacecraft pointing was not that accurate. (Not least, because the attitude sensors and the laser altimeter are on opposite ends of the spacecraft and their relative alignment was only known to about 0.2_deg -- checking that alignment was part of the purpose of the exercise.) No data was sent, but the timing was precise enough to reveal that the spacecraft distance as estimated by radio tracking was 52.6_m off. -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
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rk wrote:
The best information I can find on the www is he http://optics.org/articles/ole/9/9/2/1 "The scientific instruments will make measurements for one Earth year, the equivalent of four Mercury years. "The amount of fuel the spacecraft carries dictates this length of time," explained Sun. "Each Mercury year we have to do a burn to correct the orbit, and we carry enough fuel to do at least three burns."" I'm curious, why isn't the orbit around Mercury stable? -- "Always look on the bright side of life." To reply by email, replace no.spam with my last name. |
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In article ,
Russell Wallace wrote: ..."Each Mercury year we have to do a burn to correct the orbit, and we carry enough fuel to do at least three burns."" I'm curious, why isn't the orbit around Mercury stable? For a guess, precession from the Sun's gravity. For an orbit around Mercury, any sort of perturbation matters more than you might think, because choice of orbit is an important part of spacecraft temperature control. In particular, you typically don't want an orbit that passes low over the center of the daylight hemisphere, because there, half the spacecraft's sky is full of furnace-hot planet. Perigee(*) preferably should be near the day-night line, where surface temperatures are more moderate. Putting perigee near one of the poles achieves that over a full Mercury year, but perturbations will make the perigee location gradually move, requiring occasional corrections. (I don't know, offhand, exactly what orbit is planned for Messenger, but the above is a good guess.) (* Pedantically it should be something like perihermion, but I'm inclined to just use "perigee" as generic for planets. ) -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
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In article ,
Damon Hill wrote: (* Pedantically it should be something like perihermion, but I'm inclined to just use "perigee" as generic for planets. ) Periapsis and apoapsis? See also "apsis". *Too* generic. Sometimes it is useful to have different (unambiguous) words for perigee and perihelion, for example, -- spsystems.net is temporarily off the air; | Henry Spencer mail to henry at zoo.utoronto.ca instead. | |
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