During recent years, the state-of-the-art risk assessment of the threat posed to spacecraft by micrometeoroids and space debris has been expanded to the analysis of failure modes of internal spacecraft components. This method can now be used to perform risk analyses for satellites to assess various failure levels – from failure of specific sub-systems to catastrophic break-up. This new assessment methodology is based on triple-wall ballistic limit equations (BLEs), specifically the Schäfer-Ryan-Lambert (SRL) BLE, which is applicable for describing failure threshold levels for satellite components following a hypervelocity impact. The methodology is implemented in the form of the software tool Particle Impact Risk and vulnerability Analysis ...
The spatial density of debris in popular regions of low Earth orbit is sufficiently high that the im...
This paper presents a computational methodology to predict the satellite system-level effects result...
Most unmanned space missions end up with a destructive atmospheric re-entry. From ten to forty perce...
During recent years, the state-of-the-art risk assessment of the threat posed to spacecraft by micro...
Risk for spacecraft to hypervelocity impacts is typically assessed using risk analysis software such...
The rapid increase in uncontrolled high velocity objects orbiting earth poses a continuously growing...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The fundamental components of any meteoroid/orbital debris (MOD) risk assessment calculation are env...
This paper presents a case study of Micrometeoroids and Orbital Debris risk assessment for a spacecr...
Satellite equipment is vulnerable to hypervelocity impacts. This is primarily because lightweight sa...
The unconstrained growth in space debris poses an increasing systemic risk to space operations. To s...
The spatial density of debris in popular regions of low Earth orbit is sufficiently high that the im...
This paper presents a computational methodology to predict the satellite system-level effects result...
Most unmanned space missions end up with a destructive atmospheric re-entry. From ten to forty perce...
During recent years, the state-of-the-art risk assessment of the threat posed to spacecraft by micro...
Risk for spacecraft to hypervelocity impacts is typically assessed using risk analysis software such...
The rapid increase in uncontrolled high velocity objects orbiting earth poses a continuously growing...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The space environment around the Earth is populated by more than 130 million objects of 1 mm in size...
The fundamental components of any meteoroid/orbital debris (MOD) risk assessment calculation are env...
This paper presents a case study of Micrometeoroids and Orbital Debris risk assessment for a spacecr...
Satellite equipment is vulnerable to hypervelocity impacts. This is primarily because lightweight sa...
The unconstrained growth in space debris poses an increasing systemic risk to space operations. To s...
The spatial density of debris in popular regions of low Earth orbit is sufficiently high that the im...
This paper presents a computational methodology to predict the satellite system-level effects result...
Most unmanned space missions end up with a destructive atmospheric re-entry. From ten to forty perce...