Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect

Plasma brake is a thin, negatively biased tether that has been proposed as an efficient concept for deorbiting satellites and debris objects from low Earth orbit. We simulate the interaction with the ionospheric plasma ram flow with the plasma-brake tether by a high-performance electrostatic part...

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Main Author: P. Janhunen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2014-10-01
Series:Annales Geophysicae
Online Access:https://www.ann-geophys.net/32/1207/2014/angeo-32-1207-2014.pdf
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spelling doaj-357d4b0ca62b426da57e221ce26554162020-11-24T22:22:20ZengCopernicus PublicationsAnnales Geophysicae0992-76891432-05762014-10-01321207121610.5194/angeo-32-1207-2014Simulation study of the plasma-brake effectP. Janhunen0P. Janhunen1Finnish Meteorological Institute, POB-503, 00101, Helsinki, Finlandalso guest professor at Tartu University, Tartu, EstoniaPlasma brake is a thin, negatively biased tether that has been proposed as an efficient concept for deorbiting satellites and debris objects from low Earth orbit. We simulate the interaction with the ionospheric plasma ram flow with the plasma-brake tether by a high-performance electrostatic particle in cell code to evaluate the thrust. The tether is assumed to be perpendicular to the flow. We perform runs for different tether voltage, magnetic-field orientation and plasma-ion mass. We show that a simple analytical thrust formula reproduces most of the simulation results well. The interaction with the tether and the plasma flow is laminar (i.e. smooth and not turbulent) when the magnetic field is perpendicular to the tether and the flow. If the magnetic field is parallel to the tether, the behaviour is unstable and thrust is reduced by a modest factor. The case in which the magnetic field is aligned with the flow can also be unstable, but does not result in notable thrust reduction. We also correct an error in an earlier reference. According to the simulations, the predicted thrust of the plasma brake is large enough to make the method promising for low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite deorbiting. As a numerical example, we estimate that a 5 km long plasma-brake tether weighing 0.055 kg could produce 0.43 mN breaking force, which is enough to reduce the orbital altitude of a 260 kg object mass by 100 km over 1 year.https://www.ann-geophys.net/32/1207/2014/angeo-32-1207-2014.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. Janhunen
P. Janhunen
spellingShingle P. Janhunen
P. Janhunen
Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
Annales Geophysicae
author_facet P. Janhunen
P. Janhunen
author_sort P. Janhunen
title Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
title_short Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
title_full Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
title_fullStr Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
title_full_unstemmed Simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
title_sort simulation study of the plasma-brake effect
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Annales Geophysicae
issn 0992-7689
1432-0576
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Plasma brake is a thin, negatively biased tether that has been proposed as an efficient concept for deorbiting satellites and debris objects from low Earth orbit. We simulate the interaction with the ionospheric plasma ram flow with the plasma-brake tether by a high-performance electrostatic particle in cell code to evaluate the thrust. The tether is assumed to be perpendicular to the flow. We perform runs for different tether voltage, magnetic-field orientation and plasma-ion mass. We show that a simple analytical thrust formula reproduces most of the simulation results well. The interaction with the tether and the plasma flow is laminar (i.e. smooth and not turbulent) when the magnetic field is perpendicular to the tether and the flow. If the magnetic field is parallel to the tether, the behaviour is unstable and thrust is reduced by a modest factor. The case in which the magnetic field is aligned with the flow can also be unstable, but does not result in notable thrust reduction. We also correct an error in an earlier reference. According to the simulations, the predicted thrust of the plasma brake is large enough to make the method promising for low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite deorbiting. As a numerical example, we estimate that a 5 km long plasma-brake tether weighing 0.055 kg could produce 0.43 mN breaking force, which is enough to reduce the orbital altitude of a 260 kg object mass by 100 km over 1 year.
url https://www.ann-geophys.net/32/1207/2014/angeo-32-1207-2014.pdf
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