Integration and flight demonstration of a high-capacity monogroove heat-pipe radiator
Abstract
The cancellation of the TDRS-B satellite as the payload for the eighth Space Shuttle mission provided a unique opportunity to demonstrate on-orbit operation of the high-capacity monogroove heat pipe used in the space constructible radiator subsystem. In less than 4 months, a flight experiment was conceived, designed, fabricated, tested, integrated with a payload carrier, installed in the Orbiter Challenger payload bay, and successfully operated in flight. Still color photographs and direct crew visual observation of color changes in a pattern of temperature-sensitive liquid-crystal tapes provided the temperature data necessary to verify successful on-orbit startup and orbital transient response of the heat pipe when subjected to a heat load from its attached electrical heaters. This successful on-orbit demonstration verified analytical design tools and provided confidence in the use of high-capacity heat pipes for future space applications. The flight experiment hardware and the integration and test activities that led to the flight are described, and the actual flight results are compared to analytical performance predictions.
- Publication:
-
AIAA, 19th Thermophysics Conference
- Pub Date:
- June 1984
- Bibcode:
- 1984thph.confQ....R
- Keywords:
-
- Heat Pipes;
- Payload Integration Plan;
- Space Shuttle Mission 31-D;
- Spacecraft Radiators;
- Challenger (Orbiter);
- Performance Tests;
- Spaceborne Experiments;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer