LARES Satellite Thermal Forces and a Test of General Relativity
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A Monte Carlo Analysis for Collision Risk Assessment on VEGA Launcher
ARTIFICIAL SATELLITES, Vol. 51, No. 1 – 2016 DOI: 10.1515/arsa-2016-0004 A MONTE CARLO ANALYSIS FOR COLLISION RISK ASSESSMENT A Monte Carlo analysis for collision risk assessment on VEGA ON VEGAlauncher LAUNCHER payloads PAYLOADS and LARES AND LARES satellite SATELLITE G. Sindoni Sapienza Universit`a di Roma, Scuola di Ingegneria Aerospaziale, Rome, Italy e-mail: [email protected] I. Ciufolini Universit`a del Salento, Dip. Ingegneria dell’Innovazione, Lecce, and Centro Fermi, Rome, Italy e-mail: [email protected] F. Battie ELV s.p.a. e-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT. This work has been developed in the framework of the LARES mission of the Italian Space Agency (ASI). The LARES satellite has been built to test, with high accuracy, the frame–dragging effect predicted by the theory of General Relativity, specifically the Lense–Thirring drag of its node. LARES was the main payload in the qualification flight of the European Space Agency launcher VEGA. A concern arose about the possibility of an impact between the eight secondary payloads among themselves, with LARES and with the last stage of the launcher (AVUM). An impact would have caused failure on the payloads and the production of debris in violation of the space debris mitigation measures established internationally. As an additional contribution, this study allowed the effect of the payload release on the final manoeuvers of the AVUM to be understood. Keywords: LARES, VEGA, launchers, space debris, collisions. 1. INTRODUCTION On February 13, 2012, the European Space Agency’s VEGA qualification flight inserted into orbit the LARES (LAser RElativity Satellite) satellite (Ciufolini et al. -
FRACTAL STRUCTURE of the UNIVERSE. Valery Timkov, Serg Timkov, Vladimir Zhukov
FRACTAL STRUCTURE OF THE UNIVERSE. Valery Timkov, Serg Timkov, Vladimir Zhukov To cite this version: Valery Timkov, Serg Timkov, Vladimir Zhukov. FRACTAL STRUCTURE OF THE UNIVERSE.. In- ternational scientific-technical magazine: Measuring and computing devices in technological processes, Khmelnitsky national university, Khmelnitsky, Ukraine, 2016, 2 (55), pp.190 - 197. hal-01330337 HAL Id: hal-01330337 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01330337 Submitted on 10 Jun 2016 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. УДК 001.5:53.02:53.05 Timkov V. F., The Office of National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine Timkov S. V., Zhukov V. A., Research and Production Enterprise «TZHK» FRACTAL STRUCTURE OF THE UNIVERSE1 Annotation It is a hypothesis about the hierarchical fractal structure of the Universe . According to the hypothesis the Universe consists of an infinite number of spatial and hierarchic fractal- spherical levels of matter that are nested within each other. In ascending order of spatial hierarchy, the following main fractals Universe that conventionally associated with the types of interactions of matter : nuclear , atomic, electromagnetic, gravitational. It can also be assumed that there exist fractals which are older than the gravitational ones. -
The Annual Compendium of Commercial Space Transportation: 2012
Federal Aviation Administration The Annual Compendium of Commercial Space Transportation: 2012 February 2013 About FAA About the FAA Office of Commercial Space Transportation The Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation (FAA AST) licenses and regulates U.S. commercial space launch and reentry activity, as well as the operation of non-federal launch and reentry sites, as authorized by Executive Order 12465 and Title 51 United States Code, Subtitle V, Chapter 509 (formerly the Commercial Space Launch Act). FAA AST’s mission is to ensure public health and safety and the safety of property while protecting the national security and foreign policy interests of the United States during commercial launch and reentry operations. In addition, FAA AST is directed to encourage, facilitate, and promote commercial space launches and reentries. Additional information concerning commercial space transportation can be found on FAA AST’s website: http://www.faa.gov/go/ast Cover art: Phil Smith, The Tauri Group (2013) NOTICE Use of trade names or names of manufacturers in this document does not constitute an official endorsement of such products or manufacturers, either expressed or implied, by the Federal Aviation Administration. • i • Federal Aviation Administration’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation Dear Colleague, 2012 was a very active year for the entire commercial space industry. In addition to all of the dramatic space transportation events, including the first-ever commercial mission flown to and from the International Space Station, the year was also a very busy one from the government’s perspective. It is clear that the level and pace of activity is beginning to increase significantly. -
Programm 2012 Swiss Biennial
9. SCHWEIZER BIENNALE ZU WISSENSCHAFT, TECHNIK + ÄSTHETIK THE 9TH SWISS BIENNIAL ON SCIENCE, TECHNICS + AESTHETICS TOPIC 2012: DAS GROSSE, DAS KLEINE UND DER MENSCHLICHE GEIST – TEIL 2 TOPIC 2012: THE LARGE, THE SMALL AND THE HUMAN MIND – PART 2 Verkehrshaus der Schweiz, Luzern, Schweiz, 31. März – 1. April 2012 Swiss Museum of Transport, Lucerne, Switzerland, March 31 – April 1, 2012 Veranstalter – Organizer: Neue Galerie Luzern / New Gallery Lucerne www.neugalu.ch Programm – Program Samstag, 31. März 2012 – Saturday, March 31, 2012 12.00 - 12.15 Begrüssung – Welcome Address, Programmüberblick – Presentation of Program René Stettler, Gründer Schweizer Biennale zu Wissenschaft, Technik + Ästhetik – Founder, Swiss Biennial on Science, Technics + Aesthetics Keynote 12.15 - 13.00 ROGER PENROSE Mathematische Physik und Kosmologie Oxford – UK Autor von “Cycles of Time: An Extraordinary New View of the Universe” (2010), “The Road to Reality – Der Weg zur Wirklichkeit” (2004), “Shadows of the Mind – Schatten des Geistes” (1994) ON THE MYSTERIOUS BRIDGE FROM QUANTUM TO CLASSICAL, AND ITS ROLE IN CONSCIOUS MENTALITY – ZUR MYSTERIÖSEN BRÜCKE ZWISCHEN DER QUANTEN- UND DER KLASSISCHEN WELT UND IHRE ROLLE IN DER BEWUSSTEN MENTALITÄT 13.00 - 13.10 Diskussion – Discussion Leitung – Chair STUART HAMEROFF Anästhesiologie Tucson – USA Keynote 13.10 - 13.40 STUART HAMEROFF Anästhesiologie Tucson – USA Autor von “Consciousness in the universe? – Neuroscience, quantum space-time geometry and Orch OR theory (2011, Paper) mit/with Roger Penrose, “The Brain is both neurocomputer and quantum computer” (2007, Paper), “Quantum computation in brain microtubules? – The Penrose-Hameroff ‘Orch OR’ model of consciousness” (1998, Paper) PENROSE–HAMEROFF ORCH OR THEORY. CURRENT STATUS, CRITICISMS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS – DIE PENROSE/HAMEROFF ORCH OR THEORIE. -
Science & ROGER PENROSE
Science & ROGER PENROSE Live Webinar - hosted by the Center for Consciousness Studies August 3 – 6, 2021 9:00 am – 12:30 pm (MST-Arizona) each day 4 Online Live Sessions DAY 1 Tuesday August 3, 2021 9:00 am to 12:30 pm MST-Arizona Overview / Black Holes SIR ROGER PENROSE (Nobel Laureate) Oxford University, UK Tuesday August 3, 2021 9:00 am – 10:30 am MST-Arizona Roger Penrose was born, August 8, 1931 in Colchester Essex UK. He earned a 1st class mathematics degree at University College London; a PhD at Cambridge UK, and became assistant lecturer, Bedford College London, Research Fellow St John’s College, Cambridge (now Honorary Fellow), a post-doc at King’s College London, NATO Fellow at Princeton, Syracuse, and Cornell Universities, USA. He also served a 1-year appointment at University of Texas, became a Reader then full Professor at Birkbeck College, London, and Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics, Oxford University (during which he served several 1/2-year periods as Mathematics Professor at Rice University, Houston, Texas). He is now Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor, Fellow, Wadham College, Oxford (now Emeritus Fellow). He has received many awards and honorary degrees, including knighthood, Fellow of the Royal Society and of the US National Academy of Sciences, the De Morgan Medal of London Mathematical Society, the Copley Medal of the Royal Society, the Wolf Prize in mathematics (shared with Stephen Hawking), the Pomeranchuk Prize (Moscow), and one half of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics, the other half shared by Reinhard Genzel and Andrea Ghez. -
→ Space for Europe European Space Agency
number 149 | February 2012 bulletin → space for europe European Space Agency The European Space Agency was formed out of, and took over the rights and The ESA headquarters are in Paris. obligations of, the two earlier European space organisations – the European Space Research Organisation (ESRO) and the European Launcher Development The major establishments of ESA are: Organisation (ELDO). The Member States are Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the ESTEC, Noordwijk, Netherlands. Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Canada is a Cooperating State. ESOC, Darmstadt, Germany. In the words of its Convention: the purpose of the Agency shall be to provide for ESRIN, Frascati, Italy. and to promote, for exclusively peaceful purposes, cooperation among European States in space research and technology and their space applications, with a view ESAC, Madrid, Spain. to their being used for scientific purposes and for operational space applications systems: Chairman of the Council: D. Williams → by elaborating and implementing a long-term European space policy, by Director General: J.-J. Dordain recommending space objectives to the Member States, and by concerting the policies of the Member States with respect to other national and international organisations and institutions; → by elaborating and implementing activities and programmes in the space field; → by coordinating the European space programme and national programmes, and by integrating the latter progressively and as completely as possible into the European space programme, in particular as regards the development of applications satellites; → by elaborating and implementing the industrial policy appropriate to its programme and by recommending a coherent industrial policy to the Member States. -
Secretariat Distr.: General 2 April 2012
United Nations ST/SG/SER.E/646 Secretariat Distr.: General 2 April 2012 Original: English Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space Information furnished in conformity with the Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space Note verbale dated 6 March 2012 from the Permanent Mission of Poland to the United Nations (Vienna) addressed to the Secretary-General The Permanent Mission of Poland to the United Nations (Vienna) presents its compliments to the Secretary-General of the United Nations and, in accordance with article IV of the Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space (General Assembly resolution 3235 (XXIX), annex), has the honour to transmit information concerning the first Polish satellite, PW-Sat (see annex). V.12-52248 (E) 030512 040512 *1252248* ST/SG/SER.E/646 Annex Registration data on a space object launched by Poland* PW-Sat Information provided in conformity with the Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space Name of space object: PW-Sat National designator/registration 1 number: State of registry: Poland Other launching States: France, European Space Agency Date and territory or location of launch Date of launch: 13 February 2012 10 hrs 0 min 0 sec UTC Territory or location of launch: Guiana Space Centre, Kourou, French Guiana Basic orbital parameters Nodal period: 102.48 minutes Inclination: 69.5 degrees Apogee: 1,449 kilometres Perigee: 295 kilometres General function of space object: PW-Sat is the first satellite launched by Poland. It was built using the CubeSat standard by students of the Warsaw University of Technology. The general function of PW-Sat is to test a drag augmentation device for deorbiting low Earth orbit space objects after their operational phase. -
Armenian Numismatic Journal, Volume 34
Series II Volume 4 (34), No. 2 June 2008 1118 ARMENIAN 1 8 81. NUMISMATIC JOURNAL TABLE OF CONTENTS Vol. 4 (2008) No. 2 Announcement 27 Letters 27 SARYAN, L. A. International Conference on the Culture of Cilician Armenia 28 Bibliography of R. Y. Vardanyan 29 NERCESSIAN, Y. T. Counterfeit Gold Double Tahekans of Levon I 26 SARYAN, L. A. Counterfeit Coins of Tigranes the Great from Baalbek 37 Armenian Numismatic Literature 39 ISHKANIAN, H. / [Hot Cake] 41 SARYAN, L. A. Catalog of Armenian Fantasies 42 SARYAN, L. A. Armenian Paper Currency Chronicled 43 VRTANESYAN, L. A Parcel of Armenian Coins from Aintab 45 ' - ARMENIAN NUMISMATIC JOURNAL June 2008 Series II Vol. 4 (34 No. 2 ANNOUNCEMENT in slock. During 2008 The following lilies are running low, each less lhan 50 copies left we expecl some of Ihem lo be OUT OF PRINT. SP08. Nercessiaii, Y. T. Armenian Coins and Their Values, 1995, 256 pp., 48 pis. SP12. Nercessian, Y. T. Armenian Coin Auctions, 2006, vi, 118 pp. SP13. Nercessian, Y. T. Metrology of Cilician Armenian Coinage, 2007, xiv, 161 pp. B3. Bedoukian, P. Z. Armenian Coins and Medals, 1971, [24 pp.] B4. Bedoukian, P. Z., Armenian Books, 1975, [24 pp.] B8. Bedoukian, P. Z., Eighteenth Centuiy Armenian Medals Struck in Holland, 24 pp. Then on limited copies of author’s SP8 will be for sale by the author- net price each $50.00. LETTERS AND E^MIAILS TO THE EDITOR, /, /18 .- / .- - : ,, / - . - , Boy! I’m really impressed with the quality of the printing and binding, dedicated people who care what they’re doing. -
Index of Astronomia Nova
Index of Astronomia Nova Index of Astronomia Nova. M. Capderou, Handbook of Satellite Orbits: From Kepler to GPS, 883 DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-03416-4, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2014 Bibliography Books are classified in sections according to the main themes covered in this work, and arranged chronologically within each section. General Mechanics and Geodesy 1. H. Goldstein. Classical Mechanics, Addison-Wesley, Cambridge, Mass., 1956 2. L. Landau & E. Lifchitz. Mechanics (Course of Theoretical Physics),Vol.1, Mir, Moscow, 1966, Butterworth–Heinemann 3rd edn., 1976 3. W.M. Kaula. Theory of Satellite Geodesy, Blaisdell Publ., Waltham, Mass., 1966 4. J.-J. Levallois. G´eod´esie g´en´erale, Vols. 1, 2, 3, Eyrolles, Paris, 1969, 1970 5. J.-J. Levallois & J. Kovalevsky. G´eod´esie g´en´erale,Vol.4:G´eod´esie spatiale, Eyrolles, Paris, 1970 6. G. Bomford. Geodesy, 4th edn., Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1980 7. J.-C. Husson, A. Cazenave, J.-F. Minster (Eds.). Internal Geophysics and Space, CNES/Cepadues-Editions, Toulouse, 1985 8. V.I. Arnold. Mathematical Methods of Classical Mechanics, Graduate Texts in Mathematics (60), Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 1989 9. W. Torge. Geodesy, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, 1991 10. G. Seeber. Satellite Geodesy, Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, 1993 11. E.W. Grafarend, F.W. Krumm, V.S. Schwarze (Eds.). Geodesy: The Challenge of the 3rd Millennium, Springer, Berlin, 2003 12. H. Stephani. Relativity: An Introduction to Special and General Relativity,Cam- bridge University Press, Cambridge, 2004 13. G. Schubert (Ed.). Treatise on Geodephysics,Vol.3:Geodesy, Elsevier, Oxford, 2007 14. D.D. McCarthy, P.K. -
Arxiv:1211.1374V1
February 23, 2018 14:7 WSPC - Proceedings Trim Size: 9.75in x 6.5in LARESCiufolinietal 1 Testing General Relativity and gravitational physics using the LARES satellite Ignazio Ciufolini1, Antonio Paolozzi2, Erricos Pavlis3, John Ries4, Vahe Gurzadyan5, Rolf Koenig6, Richard Matzner7, Roger Penrose8, Giampiero Sindoni2 1.Dipartimento di Ingegneria dell’Innovazione, University of Salento, and INFN, Lecce, Italy, 2.Scuola di Ingegneria Aerospaziale and DIAEE, Sapienza Universit`a, di Roma. Rome. Italy, 3.Planetary Geodynamics Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA, 4.Center for Space Research, The University of Texas at Austin, TX, USA, 5.Center for Cosmology and Astrophysics, Alikhanian National Laboratory, Yerevan, Armenia, 6.Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, 7.Center for Relativity, The University of Texas at Austin, TX, USA, 8.Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, UK The discovery of the accelerating expansion of the Universe, thought to be driven by a mysterious form of ‘dark energy’ constituting most of the Universe, has further revived the interest in testing Einstein’s theory of General Relativity. At the very foundation of Einstein’s theory is the geodesic motion of a small, structureless test-particle. De- pending on the physical context, a star, planet or satellite can behave very nearly like a test-particle, so geodesic motion is used to calculate the advance of the perihelion of a planet’s orbit, the dynamics of a binary pulsar system and of an Earth orbiting satellite. Verifying geodesic motion is then a test of paramount importance to General Relativity and other theories of fundamental physics. -
Lares System : a Succesfull Example of Low Cost High Science Mission
LaresLares SystemSystem :: aa succesfullsuccesfull exampleexample ofof lowlow costcost highhigh sciencescience missionmission Enrico Flamini ASI Chief Scientst Wien 18 February 2013 The Heritage In 1992 ASI launched with the IRIS launch system on board STS 52 the LAGEOSLAGEOS----2.2.2.2. It has a diameter of60 cm, mass 405 kg and orbits earth at 5900 km. Those are perfect parameters for Geodesy and also provide some indications on relativistic effects, but is non what is needed for reach the necessary accuracy for an exact determination of the Lense –––Thirring–Thirring effect. , From LAGEOS 2 to LARES •The LAGEOS limitations for fundamental physics hadhad lead already in mid 9090’’’’the team guided by Prof I. Ciufolini and Prof A. Paolozzi to developed a specific design for a Laser Relativity Satellite: LARES •The satellite should have some specific characterischaracteristicstics : it was to be small and very heavy in order to reduce the so called nonnon---- gravitational forces •LARES principal Parameters •Mass 386,8 Kg •Diameter 36 cm •Mirrors 92 CCR ° •Orbit 1450 Km , 69.5 •Goal: measure LenseLense----ThirringThirring effect with an accuracy of 1% The LARES program • In 2008 ASI agreed with ESA to embark on board the VEGA maiden flight a scientific payload •This opportunity was recognized should need a desigdesignn to cost approach strictly tailored with the scope of the scientific mission and the risk of a maiden flight •The original contract foresaw a launch in 2009 •The following elongation of the Vega program alloweallowedd to modify the design in order to host on the LARES System other payloads: 9 CubeSats + Almasat Lares System Lares Platform Lares satellite Almasat Cubesats The Lares System provides also additional Vega environmental data and images of the flight and satellites separations LARES VS. -
Staff, Visiting Scientists and Graduate Students 2008
Staff, Visiting Scientists and Graduate Students at the Pescara Center ICRANet Faculty Staff • Belinski Vladimir ICRA • Bianco Carlo Luciano Università di Roma “Sapienza” and ICRANet • Ruffini Remo Università di Roma “Sapienza” and ICRANet • Vereschchagin Gregory ICRANet • Xue She-Sheng ICRANet Adjunct Professors of the Faculty • Aharonian Felix Albert Benjamin Jegischewitsch Markarjan Chair Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, Dublin, Ireland Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysis, Heidelberg, Germany • Arnett David Subramanyan Chandrasektar- ICRANet Chair University of Arizona, Tucson, USA • Chechetkin Valeri Mstislav Vsevolodich Keldysh-ICRANet Chair Keldysh institute for Applied Mathematics Moscow, Russia • Christodoulou Dimitrios ETH, Zurich, Switzerland • Coppi Bruno Massachusetts Institute of Technology • Damour Thibault Joseph-Louis Lagrange- ICRANet Chair IHES, Bures sur Yvette, France • Della Valle Massimo Osservatorio di CapodiMonte, Italy • Everitt Francis William Fairbank-ICRANet Chair Stanford University, USA • Fang Li-Zhi Xu-Guangqi-ICRANet Chair University of Arizona, USA • Greiner Walter Frankfurt Institute for Advanced Studies, Germany • Jantzen Robert AbrahamTaub-ICRANet Chair Villanova University USA • Kleinert Hagen Richard Feynmann-ICRANet Chair Freie Universität Berlin • Kerr Roy Yevgeny Mikhajlovic Lifshitz-ICRANet Chair University of Canterbury, New Zealand • Misner Charles John Archibald Wheeler University of Maryland • Novello Mario Cesare Lattes-ICRANet Chair CBPF, Rio de Janeiro, Brasil • Panagia Nino ESA, Space