Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) (original) (raw)
Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF)
The LDEF in Low Earth Orbit
The Long Duration Exposure Facility was placed in low-Earth orbit (LEO) by the space shuttle Challenger in April, 1984, and retrieved by the space shuttle Columbia in January, 1990. LDEF was a 14-faced (i.e., a 12-sided cylinder and two ends), gravity-stabilized spacecraft that was host to 57 individual scientific experiments. Several of these experiments were designed to characterize various aspects of the meteoroid and orbital-debris environment during the nominal nine month mission. However, as a result of LDEF's unexpectedly long exposure time (5.7 years) and the heightened awareness of the man-made debris collisional threat, it was decided to utilize the entire spacecraft as a meteoroid and orbital-debris detector. The Meteoroid and Debris Special Interest Group (M&D SIG) was organized to achieve this end.
As a result of the gravity-gradient stabilized orbital nature of LDEF (i.e., the same general surface pointed into the velocity vector during the entire mission), the large exposed surface area (~130 square meters) of LDEF provided a unique source of information concerning the LEO particulate environment and associated directionality effects for both natural and man-made particles.
Table 1. LDEF Specifications
Length | 30 feet | (9.14 m) |
---|---|---|
Width | 14 feet | (4.27 m) |
Empty Weight | ~9,000 pounds | (3,629 kilograms) |
Launch Weight | 21,393 pounds | (9,724 kilograms) |
Experiment Bays | 86 | (72 peripheral & 14 end) |
Number of Experiments | 57 | |
Deployment Date | April, 1984 | by Challenger (STS-41C) |
Retrieval Date | January, 1990 | by Columbia (STS-32) |
Orbital Altitude | 250 - 179 miles | (400 - 286 kilometers) at deployment and retrieval, respectively |
Exposed Surface Area | ~130 square meters |