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Published 2003 | public
Journal Article

The Genesis Solar-Wind Collector Materials

Abstract

Genesis (NASA Discovery Mission #5) is a sample return mission. Collectors comprised of ultra-high purity materials will be exposed to the solar wind and then returned to Earth for laboratory analysis. There is a suite of fifteen types of ultra-pure materials distributed among several locations. Most of the materials are mounted on deployable panels ('collector arrays'), with some as targets in the focal spot of an electrostatic minor (the 'concentrator'). Other materials are strategically placed on the spacecraft as additional targets of opportunity to maximize the area for solar-wind collection. Most of the collection area consists of hexagonal collectors in the arrays; approximately half are silicon, the rest are for solar-wind components not retained and/or not easily measured in silicon. There are a variety of materials both in collector arrays and elsewhere targeted for the analyses of specific solar-wind components. Engineering and science factors drove the selection process. Engineering required testing of physical properties such as the ability to withstand shaking on launch and thermal cycling during deployment. Science constraints included bulk purity, surface and interface cleanliness, retentiveness with respect to individual solar-wind components, and availability. A detailed report of material parameters planned as a resource for choosing materials for study will be published on a Genesis web site, and will be updated as additional information is obtained. Some material is already linked to the Genesis plasma data website (genesis.lanl.gov). Genesis should provide a reservoir of materials for allocation to the scientific community throughout the 21st Century.

Additional Information

© 2003 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Received 30 January 2002; Accepted in final form 21 May 2002. A portion of this work was carried out through the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Discovery Program. Special thanks to the commercial vendors who made singular efforts to meet the Genesis requirements, which were both stringent and unusual. Thanks also go to the members of the Genesis Engineering Teams, the JPL MicroDevices Laboratory Central Support Group, the Genesis Project Office, and to Alan Treiman who performed the initial diffusion-stability analysis. Two anonymous reviewers also helped to significantly clarify the content, and contributed their own humor to enhancing the project. Reference herein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not constitute or imply endorsement by the United States Government, or the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology.

Additional details

Created:
August 23, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023