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The planet Jupiter (1970), NASA SPACE VEHICLE DESIGN CRITERIA (Environment)

NASA/SP-8069, Divine, N., The planet Jupiter (1970), NASA SPACE VEHICLE DESIGN CRITERIA (Environment), NASA (Washington, DC, United States), December,1971, pp. 93, Format(s): PDF 10014k

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Data obtained through 1970, some materials published during the first half of 1971, and conclusions of the Jupiter Radiation Belt Workshop held in July 1971 are presented. All the informationon Jupiter was derived from data obtained at angular and spectral resolutions possible with Earth-based instrumentation or with sensors on aircraft, rockets, and balloons. The observations were made primarily in the visible, near visible, infrared, and radio portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. The information was assessed for the potential effects of the Jovian environment on spacecraft performance. The assessment was done independently for the three types of missions under consideration and formulated for overall spacecraft as well as for subsystem design.
Keywords:space sciences, infrared radiation, Jupiter (planet), light (visible radiation), radio astronomy, airborne equipment, ground stations, spacecraft design, spacecraft performance, systems analysis
CASI Document ID Number:72N17909
Subjects:Space Sciences: Space Sciences (General)
ID Code:105
Deposited On:16 May 2002