Bartram, B.W.; Huang, R.; Tammara, S.R.; Thielke, N.R.
NUS Corp., Gaithersburg, MD (USA)1982
NUS Corp., Gaithersburg, MD (USA)1982
AbstractAbstract
[en] This report presents information and data in support of a cost-benefit analysis being performed by Fair child Industries (FI) on the feasibility of retrieving existing US space nuclear systems in earth orbit by the Space Shuttle. This report evaluates, for US space nuclear systems presently in orbit, the radioisotopic inventory and external radiation field as a function of time, the effect of aging on fuel containment materials over the projected lifetime of the system, and the possible radioactive source terms should reentry eventually occur. Although the radioisotopic inventories and radiation fields have been evaluated for all systems, Transit 4A and Transit Triad have been emphasized in the evaluation of the aging effects and reentry consequences because these spacecraft have the shortest projected orbital lifetimes (570 and 150 years, respectively). In addition to existing systems in orbit, the radioisotopic inventory, radiation field, and reentry source terms have been evaluated for a General Purpose Heat Source (GPHS) in a parking orbit due to an aborted Galileo Mission or International Solar Polar Mission (ISPM)
Primary Subject
Source
14 May 1982; 231 p; NUS--3812(REV.1); Available from NTIS, PC A11/MF A01; 3 as DE87010467; Paper copy only, copy does not permit microfiche production.
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Report
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AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
Original Title
Radioisotope batteries
Primary Subject
Source
Transactions of the American Nuclear Society 1975 annual meeting; New Orleans, LA; 8 Jun 1975; Published in summary form only.
Record Type
Journal Article
Literature Type
Conference
Journal
Transactions of the American Nuclear Society; v. 21 p. 1-2
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