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Technical Paper

Clementine Thermal Design and Verification Testing: Quick, Cheap, Unusual, Successful

1996-07-01
961492
The thermal control subsystem design, analysis, and test-verification that made possible the successful Clementine moon-mapping mission was indeed formidable in many respects, with very high ratios of requirements-to-available resources and performance-to-cost/mass, exacerbated by an unyielding tight schedule. Environments, requirements, program restrictions, design highlights, and lessons learned are presented. Emphasis is given to the sensor-bench payload and its unusual thermal components: three types of heat pipes (variable conductance, fixed conductance, and diode), a thermal-energy-storage beryllium block, and a multitude of flexible conducting straps. A description of the thermal design verification test emphasizes its unconventionally and lessons learned. Despite adverse schedule and cost-cutting effects on test hardware, planning, and execution, test data made possible thermal model refinements and important hardware design changes.
Technical Paper

Diffusive Sampling of US Navy Submarine Atmospheres

2002-07-15
2002-01-2297
The atmospheres of US Navy Submarines are unique closed environments in which sailors both live and work for extended periods. Although this atmosphere is continuously monitored with a real-time, mass spectrometer-based Central Atmosphere Monitoring System (CAMS), the ability to measure trace constituents is limited. The identity, concentrations and distributions of trace constituents have been studied more exhaustively, in some cases for as long as the duration of a patrol, using conventional active air sampling methods such as passivated stainless steel canisters and solid sorbent tubes. The results from these studies indicate that trace constituents are generally present at concentrations well below levels that would present health concerns. However, these studies also show that there is a fairly wide variation in such levels over time, operational conditions, submarine and class of submarine.
Technical Paper

Oxidation Testing of Gas Turbine Oils

1968-02-01
680320
The newly developed Coordinating Research Council oxidation test technique for aircraft gas turbine engine lubricants has been evaluated by a “round-robin” test program. With few exceptions, the participants rated the test oils in the same order by each of the stability criteria. Reproducibilities of the test criteria (percent viscosity increases, neutralization number increases and corrosivities to metals) are considered satisfactory. Information based on test and statistical data suggested revisions in the test procedure that would reduce test variables and further improve reproducibilities.
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