Dust Measurements Between Earth and Saturn by the Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter of the New Horizons Mission
Abstract
The Venetia Burney Student Dust Counter (VSDC) on the New Horizons mission is a dust impact detector designed to map the interplanetary dust distribution along the trajectory of the spacecraft as it traverses our solar system. VSDC is the first student-built instrument on a deep space mission and is currently operated by a small group of undergraduate and graduate students at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP), University of Colorado. VSDC is based on permanently polarized thin plastic film sensors that generate an electrical signal when a dust particle impacts them. The total surface area is about 0.1 square meters and the detection threshold is about 1 micron in radius. By the time of this meeting (12/2008), VSDC will have operated for about 500 days, and will have data covering an approximate distance of 1.2 to 11.0 AU from the Sun. In this talk, we will briefly review the VSDC instrument, including the in-flight calibrations and tests. We will report on the measured spatial and size distribution of interplanetary dust particles before and after the New Horizons encounter with Jupiter. These data will also be compared to earlier measurements by Ulysses and Galileo.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2008
- Bibcode:
- 2008AGUFM.P31A1388J
- Keywords:
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- 2129 Interplanetary dust;
- 2194 Instruments and techniques