NRL Spectra - Fall 2011
NRL Spectra - Fall 2011
NRL Spectra - Fall 2011
naval research l a b o r at o ry
the magazine of the navys corporate laboratory
l i m i t e d
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l o o k f o r t h e f a l l 2 0 1 1 i s s u e S p e c t r A f e a t u r i n g t h e T a c S a t - 4 l a u n c h o n t h e c o v e r
SCIENCE
WISPR LASCO
SPACE
VMOC
STEREO
Leading EDGE
Commanding Officer
CAPT Paul C. Stewart, USN Dr. John A. Montgomery
THE
Director of Research
The U.S. Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) is approaching the launch of its 100th satellite into Earth orbit: Tactical Satellite 4 (TacSat-4). This issue of SPECTRA celebrates this milestone by focusing several articles on NRLs space research activities and contributions to the Department of Defense space program.
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NRLs pioneering and fruitful space-based Publisher research program got its start some 65 years NRL Office of Public Affairs ago with the launch of experiments on captured 4555 Overlook Ave, SW Richard Thompson, PAO German V-2 rockets to monitor the Suns Washington, DC 20375 (202) 767-2541 Contributing Writers behavior and its effect on naval communications. www.nrl.navy.mil/spectra Shannon Breland The Laboratory also conducted Americas first Donna McKinney satellite program by directing the Vanguard project Daniel Parry and developing the worlds first satellite tracking Claire Peachey system, and later the Naval Space Surveillance System. Soon after Vanguard, the Laboratory launched Editing, Design, and Production the first intelligence satellite, GRAB I, which had a NRL Technical Information Services Kathy Parrish, Head profound impact on intelligence gathering capabilities and national security decision making, particularly with regard Editing to the deterrence of nuclear war. In another early program, Claire Peachey NRL formulated the original concepts and developed the satellite Design and Production prototypes for the NAVSTAR Global Positioning System, which Jonna Atkinson earned NRL the coveted Collier Trophy. The military and commercial Heather Miller applications of GPS are revolutionary and pervasive. Photography and archives Gayle Fullerton Today, NRLs space activities continue to range from basic and applied Jamie Hartman research through advanced development and support to the warfighter. NRL James Marshall conducts research in atmospheric physics, solar physics, solar-terrestrial relations, Jon Smallwood and high-energy astrophysics. We develop spacecraft, systems using these spacecraft, and ground command and control stations. From envisioning a concept to operating a platform, NRLs scientists and engineers conduct a vibrant and important space program. We hope you enjoy SPECTRA and share it with others. To request additional copies or more information, please email spectra@nrl.navy.mil.
Contents
features
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ON THE COVER
NRL: An Explorer in Space A Year of Launches 65 Years in Space: A Timeline NRLs Wide-field Imager Selected for the Solar Probe Plus Mission SOHO Spots 2000th Comet LASCO: 13,587 CMEs and Counting Viewing the Sun in 3-D with STEREO NRL Launches Nanosatellite Experimental Platforms NRL Ready to Deploy Virtual Mission Operations Center
Comet McNaught seen from the STEREO-A spacecraft on January 17, 2007. See back cover for more details.
Outreach
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NRL and NASA Offer Unique Teacher Resource Paul Charles Recognized for Fostering STEM Education and Diversity
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news briefs
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Project Perseus: Mission Support in Iraq NRL Researchers Study Ways to Reduce Jet Aircraft Noise Scientists Imitate Nature to Engineer Nanofilms Premier Book on Tile-based GIS Published
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Focus on People
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Future Space
NRL
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YEAR OF LAUNCHES
by the Department of Defense (DoD) Space Test Program (STP); one cutting-edge instrument suite (HERSCHEL) was launched by NASA; and one transitioning operational capability (SSULI) was launched by the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP). Six of these missions are detailed in this feature. These six space activities scientifically encompass a wide range of investigations and applications typical of the breadth of NRLs space program: hyperspectral spaceborne remote sensing of the Earths coastal regions, in situ monitoring of materials and components exposed to the extreme space environment, measurements of the Earths thermosphere and ionosphere for validating and improving space weather models, and imaging of the Suns corona for increased predictive understanding of the solar wind and space weather. Operational sensor SSULI launched by the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program. NRLs Special Sensor Ultraviolet Limb Imager (SSULI) was launched October 18, 2009, on the DMSP F18 satellite. SSULI cleanly measures vertical profiles of natural airglow radiation from atoms, molecules, and ions in the upper atmosphere and ionosphere by passively scanning the Earths limb in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) to far ultraviolet (FUV) wavelength ranges, to provide space environmental data in support of military and civilian systems. SSULI is the first operational atmospheric sensor to exploit the EUV spectrum. DMSP F18 SSULI data products, once calibrated and validated, will be used operationally at the Air Force Weather Agency to support the warfighter. The DMSP is a
Every year, the Naval Research Laboratory leads or participates in numerous space projects in various stages of development. Normally, these culminate in a launch every few years, or perhaps a launch or two in a single year. This year, for example, the TacSat-4 satellite is ready for launch (see page 20), and two NRL experiments were transported to the International Space Station on Space Shuttle Endeavour. But two years ago, 2009 saw the successful launch and deployment of ten space projects spearheaded by NRL researchers. Dr. Jill Dahlburg, superintendent of NRLs Space Science Division, noted, 2009 was a banner year for NRL space science and technology. The creativity, dedication, and perseverance of our space researchers throughout the Laboratory made this remarkable multitude of achievements possible. Between March and November 2009, eight militarily relevant experiments of high technical value were integrated, launched, deployed, and operated
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The gold RAIDS scan head is visible at the open end of HREP on the International Space Station. (Photo: NASA)
RIGHT This HICO image over a coastal region of the South China Sea near Hong Kong, China, was taken October 2, 2009. The image is approximately 43 km wide and 190 km long centered upon 225N, 11418E, oriented from SW at the bottom to NE at the top.
DoD environmental monitoring spacecraft program led by the U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center. HREP, HICO, and RAIDS launched aboard the Japanese H-II Transfer Vehicle. The HICO/RAIDS Experiment Payload (HREP) launched September 10, 2009, from Tanegashima Launch Center aboard the inaugural flight of the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) H-II Transfer Vehicle. HREP is the first U.S. payload on the Japanese Experiment ModuleExposed Facility (JEM-EF), a component of the International Space Station (ISS). HREP provides all structural support and attitude knowledge to the HICO and RAIDS hyperspectral sensors, and serves as the control interface to the JEM-EF for HICO and RAIDS communication, data handling, monitoring, and power. From its vantage point on the ISS, NRLs Hyperspectral Imager for the Coastal Ocean (HICO) is collecting high-fidelity hyperspectral images of land and coastal scenes and is using this information to derive important environmental data products such as bathymetry and water clarity. Under the Office of Naval Research Innovative Naval Prototype program, HICO is successfully demonstrating the viability of
operating a commercial off-the-shelf (COTS)-based system in space for littoral environmental imaging relevant to Navy and Marine Corps operations. The Remote Atmospheric and Ionospheric Detection System (RAIDS) is a hyperspectral sensor suite studying the upper atmosphere with eight optical limb-scanning sensors that range from EUV to near-infrared wavelengths. RAIDS collects the temperature and composition of the lower thermosphere and retrieves ionospheric electron densities. The new high-resolution results are being compared with predictions from global assimilative models for improved forecasting of satellite drag, specification of the ionosphere, and investigation of the surprisingly strong relationship between atmospheric dynamic processes and global-scale ionospheric morphology. RAIDS was built and is operating in a collaboration between NRL and The Aerospace Corporation. HICO/ RAIDS was integrated and flown under the auspices of the DoD STP. MISSE-7 launched by Space Shuttle Atlantis to the International Space Station. The 7th Materials on the International Space Station Experiment (MISSE-7) was transported to the ISS by Space Shuttle Atlantis, launched November 16, 2009. The numerous
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The NRL ANDE-2 spacecraft, Castor and Pollux, shortly after deployment, as photographed by the crew of Endeavour. (Photo: NASA)
individual experiments on MISSE-7 include in situ monitoring of materials sensitivities to the harsh space environment. These experiments provide a better understanding of the durability of advanced materials and electronics exposed to vacuum, solar radiation, atomic oxygen, and extremes of heat and cold. MISSE-7 returned to Earth on NASAs STS-134 mission (the final flight of Space Shuttle Endeavour, launched May 2011) and was replaced by MISSE-8, which will remain in orbit until at least 2013. After MISSE-7 components are evaluated, the technology readiness of successful experimental components will increase to the operational prototype level. MISSE-7 and MISSE-8 were integrated and flown under the auspices of the DoD STP. ANDE-2 microsatellites launched by Space Shuttle Endeavour. The NRL ANDE-2 twin experimental microsatellites deployed on July 30, 2009, from Space Shuttle Endeavour under the auspices of the DoD STP. The two spherical microsatellites have the same size and drag coefficient but different masses, and are slowly separating into lead-trail orbits. ANDE-2 is providing a direct opportunity to study small-scale spatial and temporal variations in drag associated with geomagnetic activity. The ANDE research products are being used to improve methods for the precision orbit determination of space objects and to calibrate the Space Fence, a radar system of the U.S. Air Force 20th Space Control Squadron that tracks low-Earth-orbiting space objects. The ANDE project is also advancing miniaturization of sensor technologies that are pivotal for multi-point, in situ space weather ensing. CARE-I launched by DoD STP sounding rocket. The Charged Aerosol Release Experiment I (CARE-I) was launched by the DoD STP from the NASA Wallops Flight Facility at dusk on September 19, 2009, to investigate
properties of charged dust in the ionosphere. The bright optical CARE-I upper atmospheric display, easily seen from the ground along the East Coast of the United States, was produced by sunlight scattered by concentrated rocket exhaust that was released at 290 km altitude by a delayed firing of the sounding rocket fourth stage. The exhaust material, composed of 1/3 aluminum oxide particles and 2/3 combustion product molecules, interacted with the ionosphere to create a dusty plasma with high-speed pick-up ions. Ground-based radars tracked the effects of CARE-I on the ionosphere for more than four hours, producing valuable data about how rocket motors affect ionospheric densities. CARE-I also provided a simulation of natural disturbances in the Earths upper atmosphere. HERSCHEL launched by NASA sounding rocket. The NASA-sponsored Helium Resonance Scattering in the Corona and Heliosphere (HERSCHEL) suborbital sounding rocket launched successfully on September 14, 2009, from the White Sands Missile Range. This joint mission with the NASA Living With a Star program, NRL, and multiple institutions in Italy,
France, and the United Kingdom, provided the first global images for the two most abundant elements of the solar corona, hydrogen and helium. HERSCHEL achieved three first-time measurements: simultaneous global imaging of the extended corona in EUV, ultraviolet, and visible light; global measurement of the ratio of helium to hydrogen in the corona; and global maps of solar wind outflow. Determination of the processes that generate and drive the solar wind will provide a fundamental advance in our understanding and forecasting of space weather effects at Earth.
The CARE-I dust cloud release was the brightest object in the sky over NRL as viewed from Alexandria, Virginia, six minutes after launch. The release was produced by a solid rocket motor that remained at a fixed altitude of 290 km during the rocket engine burn.
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years in space
A TIMELINE
1949 Herbert Friedmans first V-2 rocket flight measured solar X-radiation. Friedman later made the first positive identification of stellar X-rays in 1963.
The Naval Research Laboratory entered the realm of space soon after American forces entered Germany in 1945 and captured the huge underground factory for V-2 rocket production at Nordhausen. The Americans confiscated about one hundred rockets and shipped them to the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, where the Army set about studying the propulsion system. The first American-launched V-2 flew from White Sands on April 16, 1946. Seeing the opportunities for upper atmosphere research and solar astronomy, NRL took the lead in the Navy for conducting rocket research. The V-2 Rocket Panel was formed with membership from NRL, APL (Applied Physics Laboratory), California Institute of Technology, Harvard University, University of Michigan, and other organizations to oversee the allocation of space on V-2 rockets for high-altitude research, with NRLs Ernst Krause as the first chair. The research goals included radio and sound propagation in the atmosphere, properties of the atmosphere, cosmic rays, solar ultraviolet radiation, and various biological investigations. NRLs V-2 experiments in 1946 and 1949 marked the beginning of a major space science program at the Lab. Within a decade, NRL had developed a base of rocket science that had formed into two distinct branches: one related to applications, including the development of scientific payloads; the other, the development of rocket technology. This timeline highlights some milestones in NRLs space program as it developed from those postWorld War II years to the present, when NRL is about to launch its 100th satellite and is the Navys lead laboratory for space systems research.
1949 First flight of NRLs Viking rocket, designed to replace the V-2 for scientific missions that required higher altitudes and pointing stability. 1954 NRLs photograph of a hurricane from an Aerobee rocket was the first time a major weather feature was seen from space and a convincing argu1985 1994 1995 1999 2003 2006 2009 2011
1946
NRL in space
Richard Touseys first V-2 rocket flight measured solar ultraviolet radiation.
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ment that space cloud imagery could be a valuable tool for meteorologists. 1958 Vanguard I, the oldest manmade satellite in orbit, launched on St. Patricks Day. NRL conducted Project Vanguard for the International Geophysical Year of 19571958. NRL designed and developed the three-stage rocket, the grapefruitsized satellite, and the Minitrack network that tracked the satellite using radio interferometry. The Vanguard team was transferred in October 1958 to the new National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). 19581964 Extending the Minitrack concept, NRL developed the Naval Space Surveillance System (NAVSPASUR). 1960 Launch of GRAB, the first U.S. spy satellite, along with SolRad which monitored solar X-radiation. The month after a U-2 aircraft was lost on a reconnaissance mission over Soviet territory, GRAB I was launched and began transponding intercepted electronic intelligence signals to ground stations. GRAB demonstrated the value and viability of space-based intelligence platforms. The SolRad series of satellites studied the Suns effects on Earth on missions from 1960 to 1979.
1961 First launch of the Low Frequency Trans-Ionospheric (LOFTI) radio satellite to study the propagation of radio waves through the ionosphere. 1965 Launch of OSO-2, first in a series of Orbiting Solar Observatory missions for which NRL developed solar physics instrumentation. 1967 Launch of the first of four Timation (time and navigation) satellites, which demonstrated NRLs new navigation concept that became GPS. Followed by Timation II (1969), Timation IIIA/Navigation Technology Satellite (NTS)-1 (1974), and Timation IV/NTS-2 (1977). 1971 First observation of a coronal mass ejection (CME) from space, by an NRL coronagraph on board OSO-7. 1972 NRLs Lunar Surface Camera operated on the Moon during the Apollo 16 mission, obtaining images of the Earth and celestial objects. 1973 NRL solar spectrometers operated on Skylab, Americas first space station. 1976 First launch of the Multiple Satellite Dispenser (MSD), an upper stage for the Atlas F booster, which carried multiple satellites into precise orbits. 1979 Launch of the SolWind Coronagraph on a DoD satellite to monitor the solar corona and catalog CMEs. First observation of a CME headed toward Earth, a so-called halo CME.
1958
1982 The first of five Space Shuttle flights of NRLs Solar Ultraviolet Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SUSIM) which measured absolute solar UV irradiance and examined the impact of solar variability on the Earths ionosphere and climate. SUSIM also flew on the Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite (UARS) (19912005) and produced the longest continuous absolute measurement of solar UV irradiance to date. 1983 Launch of Living Plume Shield II (LIPS II) to demonstrate direct downlink of tactical data from a low Earth orbiting spacecraft. 1985 NRL scientist Dr. John David Bartoe flew on the Space Shuttle as payload specialist for NRLs High Resolution Telescope and Spectrograph that recorded UV spectra of the Sun. 1987 The first Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I) was flown in DoDs Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) to map water vapor and ocean wind speed. NRL pioneered this technique. 1987 Launch of LIPS III provided a test bed for new space power sources.
1990 NASAs Compton Gamma Ray Observatory containing NRLs Oriented Scintillation Spectrometer Experiment
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and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). These instruments help to understand the mechanisms that form CMEs 1993 NRLs Polar Ozone and Aerosol Measurement (POAM) instrument was launched on the French Space Agency SPOT remote sensing satellite. 1994 First flight of NRLs Middle Atmosphere High Resolution Spectrometer Instrument (MAHRSI) on the German Space Agencys Shuttle Pallet Atmosphere Satellite (SPAS) to make global measurements of OH in the mesosphere and upper stratosphere.
(OSSE) was put in orbit from the Space Shuttle. It operated for 10 years. 1990 Launch of the Low-Power Atmospheric Compensation Experiment (LACE), a spaceborne target with sensors to characterize a laser beam emitted from a ground-based laser site.
and drive the solar wind, providing a genuine basis for predicting geomagnetic storms on Earth. 1999 The ARGOS satellite contained five NRL instruments to measure the upper atmosphere, conduct astronomy experiments, and test new technology. 1999 First launch in Project Starshine, a science education project for measuring variations in the density of Earths
1994 The DoD-NASA Clementine satellite, developed by NRL under the mantra of faster, better, cheaper, was launched to test lightweight miniature sensors and advanced spacecraft components, and to map the entire lunar surface.
1991 Launch of the Japanese Yohkoh solar observatory with NRL instrumentation on board to measure high-energy solar phenomena. Yohkoh provided the first definitive observations connecting solar flares to the breaking and reconnection of magnetic fields. 1995 NRLs Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) and Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) launched on the ESA/NASA Solar
upper atmosphere during solar storms. Students from all over the world helped to build the satellites and collected data from them. 2003 The first in a series of NRLs Special Sensor Ultraviolet Limb Imagers (SSULI) flew on a DMSP satellite, providing operational environmental data for the warfighter.
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2003 WindSat, the first spaceborne polarimetric microwave radiometer, launched on the NOAA/ DoD/NASA Coriolis spacecraft to measure wind speed and direction at the ocean surface.
as they form at the Sun and traverse interplanetary space to Earth. 2006 Atmospheric Neutral Density Experiment (ANDE) microsatellites deployed to monitor atmospheric density for improved orbit determination of space objects. ANDE-2 was launched in 2009. 2006 Launch of the Taiwan-U.S. COSMIC/FORMOSAT3 mission with NRLs Tiny Ionospheric Photometer (TIP) compact far-UV sensors on board to study Earths night-side ionosphere. 2006 Launch of the Microsatellite Technology Experiment (MiTEx), with NRLs Upper Stage, to test and evaluate small satellite technologies. 2006 Launch of the Japanese Hinode solar observatory with NRLs Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) to measure temperature, density, and dynamics of the solar corona.
terahertz radiation from astronomical and planetary objects. NRL contributed to the optical system of the 3.5-meter-diameter silicon carbide Cassegrain telescope. 2008 Launch of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope to survey the high-energy space environment. NRL led the team that designed and manufactured the Large Area Telescope (LAT) calorimeter, which measures the energies of gamma rays from astronomical objects and the Sun. 2009 HICO/ RAIDS launched to the International Space Station. The Hyperspectral Imager for the Coastal Ocean and Remote Atmospheric and Ionospheric Detection System collect useful environmental data for military and civilian systems. 2011 Scheduled launch of TacSat-4 with its COMMx payload to support
2005 MISSE-5 launched to the International Space Station. The suitcase-sized experiment exposed hundreds of samples of materials and components to the harsh space environment for later analysis of the effects. Followed by MISSE-6 (2008), MISSE-7 (2009) and MISSE-8 (2011).
2006 Launch of TacSat-2, part of the Operationally Responsive Space initiative to bring tactical capability to the warfighter rapidly, without the decade of development normally associated with operational military satellites. 2006 Launch of NASAs STEREO (Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory). NRLs SECCHI telescopes provide 3-D observations of CMEs
2007 Launch of STPSat-1 carrying SHIMMER and CITRUS. SHIMMER measured OH in the middle atmosphere, and demonstrated spatial heterodyne spectroscopy for space-based remote sensing. CITRIS detected when and where scintillation and refraction adversely affect radio propagation, and provided global maps of ionospheric densities. 2008 Launch of the ESA Herschel Space Observatory that measures
communications-on-the-move, data exfiltration, and Blue Force Tracking. It is designed to be reallocated rapidly to different theaters worldwide.
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NRL s
NASA has chosen the Naval Research Laboratorys Wide-field Imager to be part of the Solar Probe Plus mission slated for launch no later than 2018. The Solar Probe Plus, a spacecraft the size of a small car, will plunge directly into the Suns atmosphere, getting as close as four million miles from the stars surface. It will explore a region no other spacecraft ever has encountered in an effort to unlock the Suns biggest mysteries.
For decades, scientists have known that the solar corona, or the Suns outer atmosphere, is several hundred times hotter than the visible solar surface and that the solar wind accelerates up to supersonic speeds as it travels through the corona. In the Solar Probe Plus mission, scientists hope to find answers to the questions: Why is the solar corona so much hotter than the photosphere (the visible surface)? And how is the solar wind accelerated? The answers to these questions can be obtained only through in situ measurements of the solar wind down in the corona.
SOLAR PHYSICS
NRLs Wide-field Imager for Solar Probe (WISPR) is one of five science investigations selected by NASA for this mission. It is the only optical investigation because the solar environment is so hot the instruments need to be tucked behind a heat shield. NRLs Dr. Russell Howard, the principal investigator, says, This is an extremely exciting mission no other spacecraft has ever gone this close it is like the early voyagers of the Earth, we dont really know what to expect, but we know, whatever it is, it is going to be spectacular. The imager is a telescope that looks off to the side of the heat shield and will make 2-D images of the Suns corona
as the spacecraft flies through. But like a medical CAT scan, the orbit of the spacecraft through the corona will enable 3-D images and a determination of the 3-D structure of the corona. The experiment actually will see the solar wind and provide 3-D images of clouds and shocks as they approach and pass the spacecraft. Well be flying through the structures that weve only seen from 100 million miles away. Well be able to see all the phenomena mass ejections, streamers, shocks, comets, and dust up close. Other instruments will be able to measure the magnetic and electric fields and the plasma itself, explains
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Artists concept of the Solar Probe Plus approaching the Sun. (Credit: NASA)
The Integrated Science Investigation of the Sun consists of two instruments that will take an inventory of elements in the Suns atmosphere using a mass spectrometer to weigh and sort ions in the vicinity of the spacecraft. (Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, Texas) The Heliospheric Origins with Solar Probe Plus is led by Dr. Marco Velli who is the missions observatory scientist, responsible for overseeing assembly of the spacecraft. He will ensure adjacent
instruments do not interfere with one another and guide the overall science investigations after the probe enters the Suns atmosphere. (NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California) The Solar Probe Plus mission is part of NASAs Living With a Star Program. The program is designed to understand aspects of the Sun and Earths space environment that affect life and society. The program is managed by NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center with
oversight from NASAs Science Mission Directorates Heliophysics Division. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory is the prime contractor for the spacecraft.
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SOHO
Drawing on help from citizen scientists around the world, SOHO has become the single greatest comet finder of all time. This is all the more impressive since SOHO was not designed to find comets, but to monitor the Sun. Since it launched on December 2, 1995, to observe the Sun, SOHO has more than doubled the number of comets for which orbits have been determined over the last three hundred years, says Joe Gurman, the U.S. project scientist for SOHO at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Of course, it is not SOHO itself that discovers the comets that is the province of the dozens of amateur astronomer volunteers who daily pore over the images produced by SOHOs LASCO (or Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph) cameras. More than 70 people representing 18 different countries have helped spot comets over
In the 15 years since it launched in December 1995, the SOHO spacecraft has seen twice the number of comets as were sighted in the previous three hundred years. (Credit: NASA/ESA/Alex Lutkus)
2000 COMET
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In December 2010, as people on Earth celebrated the holidays and prepared to ring in the New Year, a European Space Agency (ESA)/NASA spacecraft quietly reached its own milestone: on December 26, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) discovered its 2000th comet.
the last 15 years by searching through the publicly available SOHO/LASCO images online. The 1999th and 2000th comets were both discovered by an astronomy student at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland. Theres an ever-growing community of amateur astronomers who contribute to this project, says Karl Battams, who has been in charge of running the SOHO comet-sighting web site since 2003 for the Naval Research Laboratory, where he does software development, data processing, and visualization work for NRLs solar physics missions. These volunteers are absolutely fundamental to the success of this program. Without them, most of this tremendously valuable astronomical data would never see the light of day. Battams receives reports from people when they find a feature in SOHOs LASCO images that has the correct location, brightness, speed, morphology, and other characteristics to be a comet. He confirms the finding, gives each comet an unofficial number, and sends the information off to the Minor Planet Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which categorizes small astronomical bodies and their orbits. It took SOHO ten years to spot its first thousand comets, but only five more to find the next thousand. That is due partly to increased participation from comet hunters and work done to optimize the images for comet-sighting, but also due to an unexplained systematic increase in the number of comets around the Sun. December 2010 saw an unprecedented 40 new comets spotted. During one short period, the rate of discoveries was so great as to be labeled a comet storm. The storm began on December 13 and ended on the 22nd, explains Battams. During that time, SOHO detected 25 comets diving into the Sun. It was crazy! LASCO was not designed to spot comets. The LASCO camera blocks out the brightest part of the Sun in order to better watch emissions in the much fainter outer atmosphere, or
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corona. LASCOs comet finding skills are a natural side effect with the Sun blocked, its also much easier to see dimmer objects such as comets. There is a significant science return from these sungrazer comets, says Battams, as they can be considered probes of solar wind conditions near the Sun. One of the main objectives of the SOHO/LASCO mission is to investiagate the solar wind and its acceleration processes. (See page 14 for more on LASCO.) Also, continues Battams, now we know there are far more comets in the inner solar system than we were previously aware of, and this can tell us a lot about how theyre formed and how they break up. We can tell that many of these comets have a common origin. Indeed, a full 85% of the comets discovered with LASCO are thought to come from a single group known as the Kreutz family, believed to be the remnants of a single large comet that broke up several hundred years ago. Sungrazers like the Kreutz family comets approach so near the Sun that most are vaporized within hours of discovery. But many of the other LASCO comets boomerang around the Sun and return periodically. One frequent visitor is comet 96P Machholz; orbiting the Sun approximately every six years, it has now been seen by SOHO three times. SOHO is a cooperative project between ESA and NASA. The spacecraft was built in Europe for ESA and equipped with instruments by teams of scientists in Europe and the USA. NRLs Dr. Russell Howard was principal investigator for the LASCO instrument. (Credit: NASA and NRL)
Learn how to find your own comet at http://sungrazer.nrl.navy.mil.
SOHOs 2000th comet, spotted by a Polish astronomy student on December 26, 2010.
Comet 96P Machholz has been seen in LASCO images three times in 15 years. This image also shows a coronal mass ejection (CME) and the planet Venus.
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LASCO
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Total CME mass (gr) Total mass/Carrington (gr)
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Total mass injection in the solar wind by CMEs over the last 14 years as observed by the LASCO instrument. spectra
n Superbowl Sun-day, February 6, 2011, NASA released a video showing a full, 360-degree image of the Sun an exciting first in solar physics. This magnificent view was sent to Earth by NASAs STEREO (Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory) mission. STEREO consists of two spacecraft observing the Sun from two different viewpoints, in stereo. The two spacecraft were launched together on October 25, 2006, and have been slowly drifting apart, each gathering detailed images of solar activity from different angles. Starting on February 6, the two were 180 degrees apart, each seeing half the Sun; combining the views allows the full view of the star. A key component of the STEREO mission is the Sun Earth Connection Coronal and Heliospheric Investigation (SECCHI), a suite of five scientific telescopes built by an international consortium led by the Naval Research Laboratory. SECCHI observes the solar corona and inner heliosphere from the surface of the Sun out to the orbit of Earth. A nearly identical SECCHI suite is on each of the two solar-powered STEREO observatories, STEREO-A ahead of Earth in its orbit and STEREOB trailing behind. The two observatories trace the flow of energy and matter from the Sun to Earth. They capture the three-dimensional structure of coronal mass ejections, the powerful eruptions of plasma and magnetic energy from the Suns outer atmosphere, or corona.
V 3-D STEREO
iewing the Sun iewing the Sun
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with
NRLs Dr. Angelos Vourlidas, SECCHI project scientist, explains the significance of being able to map the entire solar atmosphere continuously: For the first time, we can take snapshots of the entire atmosphere of a star. To put it in perspective, before STEREO we were like a person trying to get the pulse of a city by watching through a half-open window not an easy task. Now, STEREO has thrown wide open the window and we can watch the Sun and its activity in its full threedimensional glory.
The three-dimensional view offers huge potential for advances in the field of heliophysics. We can solve the puzzles behind the evolution and structure of the solar atmosphere, including its violent eruptions, because we will be able to observe every feature and source of activity at the same time all over the Sun, and follow their connections that can extend to large distances around the Sun, Vourlidas explains. STEREO will have the full 360-degree view for the next eight years. STEREO is the third mission in NASAs Solar Terrestrial Probes Program and is sponsored by NASAs Science Mission Directorate. The Goddard Science and Exploration Directorate manages the mission, instruments, and science center. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory designed and built the spacecraft and is operating them for NASA during the mission.
Learn more at http://secchi.nrl.navy.mil.
Before the three-dimensional view was available, researchers had to wait until an active region of the Sun rotated to the area visible from Earth in order to study the properties. The problem of having to wait for the proper views to appear is that the corona is highly variable, filled with regions that come and go in a matter of days, and explosions that can alter the corona landscape in a matter of hours.
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STEREO B
STEREO B
STEREO A
STEREO A
Above: Cartesian projection of the entire solar atmosphere as observed by NRLs SECCHI EUV (extreme ultraviolet) telescopes at a temperature of 1.6 million degrees. The lower panels show the individual images from each telescope and the middle panel shows the geometric configuration of the STEREO spacecraft at the time the images were taken. SECCHI acquires such full maps of the Sun every 10 to 20 minutes.
NRL FEATURES
NRL Launches
Spacecraft engineering
The Falcon 9 rocket carrying NRLs nanosatellites launched at 10:43 a.m. EST from Cape Canaverals Launch Complex 40 on the first test flight of NASAs Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program with the Dragon capsule. (Credit: SpaceX/Chris Thompson)
NRL FEATURES
wo nanosatellites designed and built by NRLs Naval Center for Space Technology were recently placed in orbit to evaluate nanosatellites as platforms for experimentation and technology development. They were launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on December 8, 2010, as secondary payloads on board a Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX), Inc., Falcon 9 launch vehicle. NRLs nanosatellites are part of the CubeSat Experiment (QbX) of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO). Cubesats are standardized, cube-shaped satellite platforms measuring only 10 cm (about 4 inches) on a side. NRO wants to demonstrate the feasibility of placing payloads on cubesats to accelerate technology evaluations and deploy new capabilities with markedly reduced costs over traditional satellite platforms. Three cubesats attached end to end are referred to as triple-unit (3U) platforms. On this launch, NRL deployed two 3U cubesats with Colony I buses built by Pumpkin Inc. of San Francisco, California, and provided by the NRO. NRLs tiny 3U cubesats contained components comparable to large satellites, including command telemetry and data handling, an electrical power system with batteries and solar arrays, an attitude control system with magnetic torque coils and reaction wheels for three-axis attitude control, and a UHF radio with antenna. Each subsystem essentially fit on a 4 x 4 inch circuit board. Engineers from the NRL Spacecraft Engineering Department tested and integrated the nanosatellites before launch, and communicated successfully with them after deployment. The
tracking, telemetry, and command (TT&C) radio was fully functional, providing reliable two-way data transfers; and the flight software, ported from previous and ongoing NRL programs to the Pumpkin Colony I processor, provided an onboard scheduler for routine vehicle control and operation. Deployments, including arrays and antennas, were verified shortly after launch, said Dr. Stephen Arnold, a computer engineer with the Spacecraft Engineering Department. We were able to command the satellites and receive stored and real-time telemetry from the onboard systems in all, the spacecraft operated as expected, and the checkout and experimentation were successful. Spacecraft attitude operated in a novel space dart mode, so called because of the shape and attitude of the deployed satellite. In this mode, atmospheric drag in the low orbit (300 km) provides a stabilization torque that, used with the onboard reaction wheels and torque coils, provides stable pointing to within five degrees of nadir throughout the orbit.
It was expected that the QbX vehicles would remain in orbit for approximately 30 days, said Arnold. In the end, one orbited for 29 days and the other for 39 days before each succumbed to the effects of atmospheric drag and was destroyed during re-entry to Earths atmosphere. Flight software, antennas, and the TT&C radio were designed, built, and integrated by NRL, as was the developmental communications payload. Environmental testing of the completed package was performed in NRLs extensive spacecraft testing facilities. Ground stations on the east and west coasts provided coverage for command loads and data collection, controlled via VPN from NRLs Blossom Point Satellite Tracking and Command Station in southern Maryland. The primary payload launched aboard the SpaceX Falcon 9 was the Dragon capsule. Developed by SpaceX and sponsored by NASAs Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program, the Dragon capsule is part of an initiative to develop private spacecraft to ferry cargo to and from the International Space Station.
Two triple-unit QbX cubesats being prepared for thermal vacuum testing at NRLs Spacecraft Checkout Facility. The space dart configuration of the satellites can be seen.
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NRL FEATURES
Spacecraft engineering
VMOC
The Naval Research Laboratory is ready to deploy a remarkable
capability that has been the focus of a six-year project developed in concert with numerous government and industry partners. Developed by NRLs Spacecraft Engineering Department, the Virtual Mission Operations Center (VMOC) is a web-enabled multi-application service that ushers in a new era for globally dispersed military users of Department of Defense, commercial, and civilian satellite payloads. For the first time, requests for satellite services will be available to any approved user who has access to the Secret Internet Protocol Network (SIPRNet). By simply clicking a few selectable criteria, user requests will be immediately prioritized within VMOC based on the Operational Commanders intent, evaluated for execution based on orbital mechanics and satellite modeling data, and, if approved, autonomously loaded into a Satellite Operations Center (SOC)
A sample Virtual Mission Operations Center screenshot.
upload buffer. All of this occurs without the need for a single man in the loop. This new capability will dramatically improve satellite utilization as well as speed of command, so critical in todays dynamic battlefield, explains Joel Hicks, VMOC program manager. VMOC is accredited on SIPRNet and ready for operations today. Specifically, VMOC is marked as the exclusive planning and tasking tool for two operational missions scheduled for launch in 2011: TacSat-4 and ORS-1. TacSat-4 is an NRL-integrated mission that provides 10 ultra high frequency (UHF) channels that can be used for myriad combinations of communications, data exfiltration, or friendly force tracking. ORS-1 will provide electro-optical/infrared capability for USCENTCOM. VMOC servers are located at NRL to support Blossom Point (Maryland) operations of TacSat-4, and at Schriever Air Force Base, Colorado, to support SOC-11 operations of ORS-1. The VMOC is also providing the primary user interface for the High Integrity GPS (HIGPS) program, led at NRL. HIGPS has the ability to provide military users substantially improved capabilities for quickly locking onto and tracking a GPS signal, even while operating in restrictive
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NRL FEATURES
environments such as urban areas, forests, mountains, and canyons, as well as under enemy jamming attempts or amid battlefield radio frequency noise. VMOC just completed its final demonstration, of three, for the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering. All requirements were met and all interfaces verified. VMOC is now fully ready to support any decision to operationalize HIGPS. The VMOC effort has been a cooperative one and has included the following agencies and companies: NASA, Air Force Research Laboratory, Space and Missile Defense Command, SAIC, Boeing, General Dynamics, Praxis, Space Ground System Solutions, PTR Group, and NRLs Information Technology Division. The primary sponsors for VMOC include the Office of Naval Research and the Operationally Responsive Space (ORS) Office.
TacSat-4
TacSat-4, shown here in NRLs Spacecraft Test Facility, arrived at Alaskas Kodiak Launch Complex on March 1 and is undergoing final preparations for its scheduled late 2011 liftoff. VMOC will manage TacSat-4 payload tasking to provide communications management designees the ability to request satellite communications via SIPRNet and to provide dynamic channel assignments for flexible theater support. TacSat-4 is a Navy-led joint mission to augment current satellite communications capabilities and to advance Operationally Responsive Space (ORS) systems.
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Project Perseus:
cientists and engineers with the Naval Research Laboratory Marine Geosciences Division recently completed a 10-week deployment to help enable the safe drawdown of U.S. combat troops in Iraq. Partnering with Northrop Grumman Corp., Dr. John Brozena and Dr. Joan Gardner co-managed Project Perseus to support ground troops in counter-IED (improvised explosive device) operations, using an airborne multisensor instrumentation suite. Incorporating the expertise of the U.S. Navy Scientific Development Squadron ONE (VXS-1), the NRL team, including project engineer Robert Liang, mission planning specialist Mike Vermillion, and data processor/analyst Dr. Andrei Abelev, installed and made mission-ready the Northrop Grumman Multi-Band Synthetic Aperture Radar (MB-SAR) aboard the squadrons NP-3D Orion research aircraft. Additional components for the MB-SAR were obtained from the Army Space Development Command and U.S. Air Force, and an MX-15 electro-optical/infrared video camera system and trackball were provided by the Office of Naval Research. The MB-SAR is a radar surveillance system with real-time onboard processing that integrates with other systems to provide tactically relevant information directly to troops on the ground. Arriving in theater July 20, 2010, the Project Perseus team commenced the performance of 34 flights, approximately 6 to 7 hours each, under the direction of Task Force ODIN (Observe, Detect, Identify, Neutralize). MB-SAR and scene-change data were obtained along the movement routes used by the ground forces, and the images were produced on board the aircraft with the latency of only minutes. Data were collected in circular passes to illuminate objects from all directions, enhancing the ability to see objects with any orientation. A typical circle, 20 kilometers in diameter, took about 10 minutes to fly and illuminated a 12-kilometer section of a road and its surroundings. The MB-SAR and scene change images were available 10 minutes after the completion of each circle and were exploited on board
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The crew of Project Perseus assembled in front of VXS-1s research-modified NP-3D Orion.
spiral) were acquired over Colombia in 2009 under sponsorship of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. The 2010 Iraq operation was not the first time NRL and VXS-1 personnel worked in an active war zone. The group deployed in 2006 and 2008 to Afghanistan for several months to conduct the Rampant Lion I and II missions. Partnering with scientists and engineers from the NRL Remote Sensing Division, Rampant Lion I collected, processed, analyzed, and interpreted data which were integrated into U.S. Geological Survey natural resource assessments. These assessments were released to the Afghanistan government, international donor organizations, private investment groups, and NGOs working on the reconstruction and economic revitalization of Afghanistan. The collected imagery is enormously important for seismic and flood hazard analysis; development of roads, pipelines, and property boundaries; other civil infrastructure projects; and agriculture and mineral resource management. Rampant Lion II developed new technologies for the rapid acquisition, processing, archiving, and distribution of a broad spectrum of commonly registered geospatial information, primarily to support military operations and counternarcotics objectives that also included testing the utility of new sensor systems for various applications. Due to their success in Afghanistan and Colombia, the NRL team was chosen for the Iraq mission as a recog-
nized leader coordinating and operating a multisensor platform under hostile conditions. In 2008, Brozena, Gardner, and colleague Dr. Vicki Childers each received the Navy Superior Civilian Service Award for contributions to the Rampant Lion I mission. In 2009, Gardner was awarded the Society of American Indian Government Employees (SAIGE) Meritorious Service Award for her contributions to the global war on terrorism.
VXS-1 conducts airborne scientific experimentation and technology development missions worldwide in support of Navy and national science and technology priorities and warfighting goals. Stationed at Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, VXS-1 operates five aircraft: three researchconfigured NP-3D Orions and two RC-12 Guardrails. Recent VXS-1 missions have supported NASA, DARPA, NOAA, the Missile Defense Agency, and many other agencies. Research conducted on these missions includes anti-ship missile testing, sensor development, oceanographic mapping, satellite communications, and mapping of hazardous weather events. In 2010, VXS-1 became the first squadron to operationally deploy a manned Navy airship in over 45 years, first to Yuma, Arizona, then to the Gulf of Mexico to aid the Coast Guard in Deepwater Horizon operations.
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A scaled version of a jet aircraft nozzle with chevrons for testing noise reduction concepts.
increased as the ratio of the pressure inside the nozzle to the pressure outside (total pressure ratio) increased. These results were confirmed by experimental data from UC, showing that computational analysis works well in assessing flow and noise characteristics. The research team published their finding in the american institute of aeronautics and astronautics Journal. Following the successful simulations of the jet flow and noise, the research team shifted their work to simulate and assess specific noise reduction concepts. They conducted experiments and simulations to assess the impact of the mechanical chevrons on the flow from the exhaust nozzle and the near-field noise. Their simulation results revealed that the chevrons caused the shock cells to move closer to the nozzle and also reduced the spacing between them. The chevrons also induced more spread of the jet flow (weakened the core) and decreased the strength of the shock cells. Together, these factors reduced the noise significantly, by more than 3 decibels at the locations tested. As a next step, the researchers replaced the mechanical chevrons with fluidic injections of air at discrete locations along the jet nozzle rim. Using a 1 to 2 percent injection of air under a variety of operating conditions, the researchers achieved the same noise reduction as they
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Researchers have developed new methods of reducing the noise generated by high performance supersonic military aircraft. (Photo: US Navy)
did using the mechanical chevrons. The advantage of the fluidic injection technique is that it can be easily turned on and off, for use only when needed. The researchers then investigated a combination of mechanical chevrons and fluidics. They were able to improve the effect of the chevrons on flow modification and noise reduction by properly positioning the fluidic injections of air. They also injected air upstream of the nozzle exit, near the throat, to effectively modify the flow area. This modified the shock cell structures and reduced the noise generated.
Working under the Office of Naval Researchs Rapid Technology Transition program, GE researchers then tested the mechanical chevrons on a full-scale Navy engine. The tests, conducted at Naval Air Warfare Center Lakehurst, New Jersey, proved the mechanical chevrons to be effective, as predicted by the NRL simulations. Work continues on this project, using the validated computational capability, to further increase the noise reduction level and advance the technology.
Reduction in pressure fluctuations (and hence noise) with mechanical chevrons (brown) in comparison to the baseline case without chevrons (green) at a representative location outside but near the jet flow.
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n nature, water striders can walk on water, butterflies can shed water from their wings, and plants can trap insects and pollen. Scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory are part of a research team working to engineer surfaces that imitate some of these water repellency features found in nature. This technology offers the possibility of significant advances for producing new generations of coatings that will be of great value for military, medical, and energy applications. The research, funded by the Office of Naval Research, is published in the December 2010 issue of nature Materials. Dr. Walter Dressick from NRL, Professor Melik Demirel of Penn State, and Dr. Matthew Hancock of MIT have collaborated to create an engineered water-repellent thin film. What sets this development apart from earlier technologies is that this newest film has the ability to control the directionality of liquid transport. In this system, parylene (or PPX) nanorods are deposited on the surface by a simple, straightforward vapor deposition method. The single step usually takes less than 60 minutes, compared with the more complex, multi-step lithography processes often used in previous
systems. This is the first time this kind of surface has been engineered at the nanoscale. In the newly created surface, the nanorods that form the film are smooth on a micron scale. This size and smoothness in the posts means that when droplets are placed on the surface, they move without being distorted in any way. Also, they can be moved without pumps or optical waves. Previous systems caused the water droplets to be distorted, which could rupture, spill, or destroy the cargo in the droplet when used in medical or microassembly applications. As they continue the research, the team will focus on optimizing the droplet transport mechanism and tuning the preparation method. Looking to the future, researchers are hopeful that this film might be used as a coating on ships hulls where it would reduce drag and slow fouling. In industry applications, the film might have uses in directional syringes and fluid diodes, pump-free digital fluidic devices, increased efficiency of thermal cooling for microchips, and tire coatings.
Overview of nanofilm preparation and anisotropic wetting property. a. Schematic of PPX nanofilm deposition by oblique angle polymerization. b. Electron microscope cross-section of PPX nanofilm (insets show top view and high-resolution cross-section micrographs). c. Picture of the anisotropic adhesive wetting surface with water drops. d. Water adhesion and release in three configurations of the nanofilm. Schematics illustrate the nanorod inclination at each tilt angle and correspond to photographs showing the anisotropic wetting behavior of the nanofilm. (Credit: Nature Materials)
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aval Research Laboratory computer scientists John Sample and Elias Ioup recently had their book Tile-Based geospatial information Systems published by Springer. Tile-Based geospatial information Systems is the first published book dedicated to the subject.
The authors also dedicate attention to the overall theoretical understanding and development of algorithms to maximize functionality and efficiency within a tile-based system. Sample and Ioup both work in the Geospatial Sciences and Technology Branch at the NRL Stennis Space Center (SSC) detachment on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. NRL-SSC employs approximately 200 civilian scientists and support personnel and conducts research and development in the fields of marine geosciences, oceanography, and underwater acoustics in support of the Navy and Marine Corps.
Sample and Ioup present theory and provide concrete techniques to implement a tile-based online mapping system, knowledge they honed while developing NRLs Tile Server. NRLs Tile Server is widely used across the Department of Defense for high-performance map access. Using their experiences in the field of geospatial computing, the authors provide valuable case studies and samples of code to aid in comprehension of the topic, benefitting both the experienced professional practitioner and novice GIS student. Because of increased loading speed and improved usability, tile-based systems have become the new standard for online mapping. Anyone who has searched for a location using Google, Yahoo, or Microsofts online maps has interacted with a tile-based system. When a searchers Internet speed is slower, he may notice a square of the map takes longer to load; the square is a tile. Each map tile loads simultaneously; if tiles were not used, the searcher would be forced to wait for one large image to load every last byte of data. In addition to this relatively simple mapping interface improvement, Tile-Based geospatial information Systems discusses use of tile-based systems with 3-D mapping tools, various coordinate systems, indexing requirements, and other topics.
Using multi-level tile-based systems, the clarity of an image improves as a viewer zooms because the number of tiles covering the same distance, though at different levels of detail, increases.
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NRL OUTREACH
David Lalejini from NRL-SSC helps a pair of teachers deploy a Sea Perch robot during workshop activities. (Photo: NASA)
them to conduct research missions in nearby bodies of water. Students then are able to enter water quality data into the Sea Perch Data Bank, an international water quality online database. Collected data are integrated into state-of-the-art GIS maps and comparative graphs, which can be accessed by students and teachers to use in classroom exercises and projects. Scientists from Stennis Space Center are augmenting the teachers Sea Perch lessons in the classroom during the spring semester, providing practical applications and real-world examples of the STEM lessons they learn as part of the Sea Perch program. The Navy operates underwater robots every day from right here at Stennis Space Center, said Dr. Joe Calantoni of NRL. We want to not only excite students about STEM in general, but also to show our local students that they dont have to leave home to study the depths of the sea or the far reaches of space. Much has been said about the importance of inspiring students to pursue studies and even careers in the areas of science, technology, engineering, and math, Wallace said. This is exactly the kind of hands-on, interactive exercise that can provide that inspiration. (Credit: NASA press release)
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major naval warship. He also was the first African-American admiral, vice admiral and U.S. Fleet commander. In 2009, the Navy christened an Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer in his name. Gravelys efforts to promote diversity and STEM education and to expand the Naval Research Enterprise science and technology workforce exemplified the type of leader he was, Charles said. Its thrilling to know that I can continue his legacy and beliefs with the HBCU/MI program. I take pride in trying to provide the same opportunities to our youth so they, too, can follow in Gravelys footsteps one day and be a first. Charles oversees the NRL summer internship programs Historically Black Colleges and Universities/Minority Institutions/Tribal Colleges and Universities component, including strategic planning, recruitment, and budget activities. To date, the program has provided training opportunities and role models for more than 200 students considering careers in STEMrelated areas. As a nation, we have proven ourselves worldwide to be leaders in the [science and technology] field, however, we must continue to strengthen our workforce by mentoring our youth, Charles said. Brilliant ideas can resonate from all minds, regardless of race, color, or gender. By investing in our youth today, we can remain as leaders in exploratory science and advanced technological development that is essential for the future of the Navy and Marine Corps. (Credit: Office of Naval Research)
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NRL
SCHEDULE
Oceans 11
E X H I B I T
P R O G R A M
and achievements at specialized events and conferences nationally and internationally. The goal is to seek diverse and non-traditional audiences and excite visitors with interactive displays, models, artifacts, presentations, and participatory demonstrations............ .........
Waikoloa, HI Sarasota, FL
International Conference on Stability, Handling, and Use of liquids IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium Association of Old Crows International Symposium I/ITSEC
American Geophysical Union American Meteorological Society SPIE Photonics West AGU Ocean Sciences Meeting National Space Symposium Navy League Sea Air Space AUVSI
December 69, 2011 January 2226, 2012 January 2426, 2012 February 2023, 2012 April 1619, 2012 April 1618, 2012 August 710, 2012
San Francisco, CA New Orleans, LA San Franciso, CA Salt Lake City, UT Colorado Springs, CO National Harbor, MD Las Vegas, NV
Advantages/Features
provides epilayers with low BpD levels (<1 cm2) over large areas Applicable to any SiC substrate with offcuts of approximately 8 degrees Compatible with conventional SiC epitaxy More efficient than traditional BpD reduction methods
Applications
high-voltage diodes high-voltage switches high-efficiency power electronic components and converters
Advantages/Features
insensitive to spectral errors caused by changing scenes ideal in applications where jitter is a concern (on airplanes, ground vehicles) and for imaging fast events such as combustion processes or explosions reduced manufacturing cost compared to traditional monolithic SHS
Applications
Satellite remote sensing of the Earths atmosphere; planetary astronomy; and laboratory spectroscopy C-ShS in lWir has been demonstrated in the laboratory
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John Schaub
It takes a team to get to space, and John Schaub knows that. As superintendent of the Spacecraft Engineering Department in the Naval Research Laboratorys Naval Center for Space Technology, Schaub leads a highly skilled team of engineers, scientists, and technicians in the execution of cutting-edge spacecraft research and development programs relevant to the needs of the Department of the Navy and Department of Defense. Schaub has more than 26 years of federal service, all of it at NRL. During these years, Schaub has contributed to the successful launch of 19 satellites or space instruments, with several more under development. He has seen the changes in the ways that systems are built. When I started in the mid 80s, the nation was producing very large and very capable space systems. Unfortunately these systems were also massive and therefore very costly to launch.
Schaub completed a dual degree program, with bachelors degrees in mechanical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology and in physics with honors from the State University of New York at Oneonta. Schaub likes to make the case for NRL being a good place to work. NRLs retention statistics make the case that when folks come to NRL, they stay My theory is it is because of the work. NRL offers exciting opportunities to materially contribute towards solving real problems. The personal satisfaction that comes from knowing that the work that you do makes a difference is underrated. I promise recruits that they will be challenged every day they come to work.
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future space
What is the Naval research laboratorys future in space?
Naval Center for Space Technology, for his view on the subject.
ilhelm began his NRL career in 1959, not long after Sputnik, Explorer, and Vanguard hit the skies, and he has played a leading role in many of NRLs pioneering space achievements, from electronic intelligence gathering to GPS to tactical microsatellites. Wilhelm singles out two technologies he thinks could be game-changing and that he would like to see NRL take into the future: electrodynamic propulsion systems and low-cost launch vehicles. Electrodynamic propulsion technology exploits the Earths magnetic field to allow a spacecraft to maneuver without expending precious fuel. This is a revolutionary technology, explains Wilhelm, that will enable satellites to conduct missions that cannot be done right now, including moving between significantly different orbital inclinations. NRL has already built and tested a proof-of-concept spacecraft, TEPCE (Tether Electrodynamic Propulsion Cubesat Experiment), to be launched next year. TEPCE consists of two microsatellites at the ends of a 1-kmlong, conducting tether; electrons are collected at one end of the tether and emitted at the other, producing a force which changes the satellites orbit. The force is determined by the length of the tether, the amount of current, and the strength of the earths magnetic field. NRL proposes to take this technology to the next step by developing a 3-km-long tether divided into three sections, each with separate control of the magnitude and direction of the current. This allows for refined maneuvering so the spacecraft can rendezvous with other spacecraft and space objects, and then use cameras and robotic arms to see and grasp them, says Wilhelm. We envision this kind of spacecraft delivering payloads to orbiting satellites through the use of plug-in interfaces; and also servicing ailing spacecraft, and capturing and de-orbiting space debris. Wilhelm also wants to develop small, low-cost launch vehicles: Launch has been unpredictable and expensive since day 1 in space exploration, and there are still delays and failures. NRL and other satellite developers can now rapidly design and build small, highly capable satellites, but the holdup is still in getting the satellite into orbit. The Department of Defense is the most likely developer of a better launch vehicle, benefiting most from the rapid deployment it will enable. Standardized spacecraft, already being built in the Operationally Responsive Space (ORS) initiative, will be assembled and launched within days to meet immediate mission needs. I want to see NRL work with the ORS Office and the Army to make this happen. What keeps NRL at the forefront of space research and technology for the future? Wilhelms answer comes easily: NRL invests in talented researchers and top-notch facilities. We have a solid and reliable base of expertise, so when were presented with a new problem, we have the knowhow and imagination and facilities and flexibility to tackle it. This has always been our strength.
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Cover Story:
COMET MCNAUGHT
Due to a fortuitous spacecraft roll angle, Comet Mcnaught was the unanticipated sight captured in the first image taken by NRLs SECCHI/HI1 instrument on the NASA STEREO-B satellite. Scientists in the SECCHI Payload Operations Center in NRLs Space Science Division building were initially taken aback at the brilliant streak of light that dominated the first image returned from the instrument. But when comet McNaught was recognized, concern turned to relief and then delight at both the fantastic image, and the demonstration of instrument performance: SECCHI/HI1 has since returned unprecedented views of the solar wind, coronal mass ejections, and co-rotating interaction regions. The comet the brightest seen in some 30 years was subsequently observed for several days by the SECCHI/ HI1 instruments on both the STEREO-A and -B spacecraft. The spectacular image sequences and movies are available online at http://sungrazer.nrl.navy.mil/index.php?p=mcnaught
nrl.navy.mil
Reviewed and Approved NRL/PU/1000--11-558 RN: 11-1226-3322 September 2011 CAPT Paul C. Stewart Commanding Officer