Use of ground radar to detect reentering debris
Abstract
The velocity of the particles is required to identify the type of particles producing the ionization trails. A method of approximating the velocity of a meteor from radar data was developed. The method requires the time between the spacings of the Fresnel interference fringes, the range to the ionization trail, and the wavelength of the radar system. The orbital mechanics of the problem are evaluated, if the particles originate with the shuttle, the orbital mechanics will substantiate the relative position of the particles with the position of the shuttle. A program to determine spacecraft orbital decay due to perturbations is utilized for a preliminary evaluation of the orbital mechanics of the problem. Many assumptions concerning the size, shape, density, etc. of the particles are necessary for the preliminary evaluation. The results do not negate the possibility that the events observed by the radar are reentering particles originating from the shuttle.
- Publication:
-
In its Orbital Debris p 164-169 (SEE N85-21188 12-12
- Pub Date:
- March 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985orde.rept..164C
- Keywords:
-
- Particle Tracks;
- Phased Arrays;
- Radar Detection;
- Reentry;
- Space Debris;
- Space Observations (From Earth);
- Velocity Measurement;
- Fresnel Region;
- Orbital Mechanics;
- Trajectory Analysis;
- Communications and Radar