The breakup of the Space Shuttle Columbia as it reentered
Earth's atmosphere on February 1, 2003, reminded the public--and
NASA--of the grave risks posed to spacecraft by everything from
insulating foam to space debris. Here, Alan Tribble presents a
singular, up-to-date account of a wide range of less conspicuous
but no less consequential environmental effects that can damage or
cause poor performance of orbiting spacecraft. Conveying a wealth
of insight into the nature of the space environment and how
spacecraft interact with it, he covers design modifications aimed
at eliminating or reducing such environmental effects as solar
absorptance increases caused by self-contamination, materials
erosion by atomic oxygen, electrical discharges due to spacecraft
charging, degradation of electrical circuits by radiation, and
bombardment by micrometeorites. This book is unique in that it
bridges the gap between studies of the space environment as
performed by space physicists and spacecraft design engineering as
practiced by aerospace engineers.
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