OARE flight maneuvers and calibration measurements on STS-58
Abstract
The Orbital Acceleration Research Experiment (OARE), which has flown on STS-40, STS-50, and STS-58, contains a three axis accelerometer with a single, nonpendulous, electrostatically suspended proofmass which can resolve accelerations to the nano-g level. The experiment also contains a full calibration station to permit in situ bias and scale factor calibration. This on-orbit calibration capability eliminates the large uncertainty of ground-based calibrations encountered with accelerometers flown in the past on the orbiter, thus providing absolute acceleration measurement accuracy heretofore unachievable. This is the first time accelerometer scale factor measurements have been performed on orbit. A detailed analysis of the calibration process is given along with results of the calibration factors from the on-orbit OARE flight measurements on STS-58. In addition, the analysis of OARE flight maneuver data used to validate the scale factor measurements in the sensor's most sensitive range is also presented. Estimates on calibration uncertainties are discussed. This provides bounds on the STS-58 absolute acceleration measurements for future applications.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- April 1994
- Bibcode:
- 1994STIN...9432924B
- Keywords:
-
- Accelerometers;
- Calibrating;
- In-Flight Monitoring;
- Space Shuttle Missions;
- Spacecraft Maneuvers;
- Bias;
- Factor Analysis;
- Instrument Errors;
- Spaceborne Experiments;
- Spacecraft Instrumentation