Micro star tracker with a curved vane for a short baffle length and sharp stray light attenuation

2020 ◽  
Vol 59 (13) ◽  
pp. 4131
Author(s):  
Sukhan Lee ◽  
Rashid Saleem ◽  
Sang-Seok Lee
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Marciniak

This thesis describes strategies to perform stray light testing in an earthbound laboratory while accounting for atmospheric and surface scattering phenomena that make these measurements difficult. We present a method to analyze and predict the stray light performance for a baffled star tracker optical system. This method involves a hybrid stray light analysis procedure that combines experimental measurements of a star tracker lens optics and uses ray-tracing to obtain attenuation curves. We demonstrate these analytical techniques using an engineering model ST-16 star tracker from Sinclair Interplanetary along with a baffle prototype. The system attenuation curve's accuracy is validated by comparing independently measured baffle attenuation curves with equivalent ray-tracing models. Additionally, exclusion angles are defined for the ST-16 sensor by calculating the false detection rate that varies with system attenuation levels. These techniques provide a versatile alternative to conventional testing for preliminary design stages for a star tracker baffle that emphasizes the use of modest infrastructure.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Marciniak

This thesis describes strategies to perform stray light testing in an earthbound laboratory while accounting for atmospheric and surface scattering phenomena that make these measurements difficult. We present a method to analyze and predict the stray light performance for a baffled star tracker optical system. This method involves a hybrid stray light analysis procedure that combines experimental measurements of a star tracker lens optics and uses ray-tracing to obtain attenuation curves. We demonstrate these analytical techniques using an engineering model ST-16 star tracker from Sinclair Interplanetary along with a baffle prototype. The system attenuation curve's accuracy is validated by comparing independently measured baffle attenuation curves with equivalent ray-tracing models. Additionally, exclusion angles are defined for the ST-16 sensor by calculating the false detection rate that varies with system attenuation levels. These techniques provide a versatile alternative to conventional testing for preliminary design stages for a star tracker baffle that emphasizes the use of modest infrastructure.


1991 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabella T. Lewis ◽  
Arno G. Ledebuhr ◽  
Timothy S. Axelrod ◽  
Scott A. Ruddell

2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiyong Wang ◽  
Zhenfei Song ◽  
Jingjin Li ◽  
Ershuai Xu ◽  
Tianmu Qin
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 2503
Author(s):  
Xinyuan Liu ◽  
Fei Xing ◽  
Shaoyan Fan ◽  
Zheng You

CubeSats have been widely used in remote sensing applications such as global coverage, hotspots revisited, etc. However, due to the strict size limitation, the high-accuracy measuring instruments such as star tracker are too large to be applied in CubeSat, thus causing insufficient accuracy in satellite attitude and image positioning. In order to reduce the volume of star tracker without compromising the performance, the relationship between the volume and pointing accuracy or dynamic performance is studied and an optimization model of star tracker with a minimum volume is proposed. Compared with the traditional star tracker, a deployable star tracker with a novel deployable baffle and surrounded circuit structure is designed. The baffle consists of nested three-stage sub-baffles with a scientifically analyzed and verified taper to achieve smooth deployment and compression. The special circuit structure surrounds the lens and can be compressed in the inner sub-baffle. Therefore, the deployable star tracker can be compressed to the smallest volume and the sub-baffles can be deployed to the accurate position without self-lock risk. The experimental results verify its deployment accuracy and reliability as well as space environmental adaptability. The deployable star tracker has almost the same results on stray light suppression ability, pointing accuracy (better than 3″ (3σ)) and dynamic performance (up to 3°/s) with the traditional star tracker. Furthermore, an integrated attitude determination and control system based on the deployable star tracker for CubeSat is further designed and implemented to support high-accuracy remote sensing.


2020 ◽  
Vol 642 ◽  
pp. 133-146
Author(s):  
PC González-Espinosa ◽  
SD Donner

Warm-water growth and survival of corals are constrained by a set of environmental conditions such as temperature, light, nutrient levels and salinity. Water temperatures of 1 to 2°C above the usual summer maximum can trigger a phenomenon known as coral bleaching, whereby disruption of the symbiosis between coral and dinoflagellate micro-algae, living within the coral tissue, reveals the white skeleton of coral. Anomalously cold water can also lead to coral bleaching but has been the subject of limited research. Although cold-water bleaching events are less common, they can produce similar impacts on coral reefs as warm-water events. In this study, we explored the effect of temperature and light on the likelihood of cold-water coral bleaching from 1998-2017 using available bleaching observations from the Eastern Tropical Pacific and the Florida Keys. Using satellite-derived sea surface temperature, photosynthetically available radiation and light attenuation data, cold temperature and light exposure metrics were developed and then tested against the bleaching observations using logistic regression. The results show that cold-water bleaching can be best predicted with an accumulated cold-temperature metric, i.e. ‘degree cooling weeks’, analogous to the heat stress metric ‘degree heating weeks’, with high accuracy (90%) and fewer Type I and Type II errors in comparison with other models. Although light, when also considered, improved prediction accuracy, we found that the most reliable framework for cold-water bleaching prediction may be based solely on cold-temperature exposure.


Plants ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1477
Author(s):  
Asadullah Khan ◽  
Sanaullah Jalil ◽  
Huan Cao ◽  
Yohannes Tsago ◽  
Mustapha Sunusi ◽  
...  

The anthocyanin biosynthesis attracts strong interest due to the potential antioxidant value and as an important morphological marker. However, the underlying mechanism of anthocyanin accumulation in plant tissues is not clearly understood. Here, a rice mutant with a purple color in the leaf blade, named pl6, was developed from wild type (WT), Zhenong 41, with gamma ray treatment. By map-based cloning, the OsPL6 gene was located on the short arm of chromosome 6. The multiple mutations, such as single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) at −702, −598, −450, an insertion at −119 in the promoter, three SNPs and one 6-bp deletion in the 5′-UTR region, were identified, which could upregulate the expression of OsPL6 to accumulate anthocyanin. Subsequently, the transcript level of structural genes in the anthocyanin biosynthesis pathway, including OsCHS, OsPAL, OsF3H and OsF3′H, was elevated significantly. Histological analysis revealed that the light attenuation feature of anthocyanin has degraded the grana and stroma thylakoids, which resulted in poor photosynthetic efficiency of purple leaves. Despite this, the photoabatement and antioxidative activity of anthocyanin have better equipped the pl6 mutant to minimize the oxidative damage. Moreover, the contents of abscisic acid (ABA) and cytokanin (CK) were elevated along with anthocyanin accumulation in the pl6 mutant. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that activation of OsPL6 could be responsible for the purple coloration in leaves by accumulating excessive anthocyanin and further reveal that anthocyanin acts as a strong antioxidant to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) and thus play an important role in tissue maintenance.


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