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Question about MRO's HGA
atelescope
post Sep 13 2006, 01:54 AM
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Hello everyone, I am new to here. smile.gif

I have a question:
I wonder why MRO's HGA is wrapped with a layer of metal (aluminium?), whcih is the same as Mars Odyssey's. I can't find the answer on MRO official site, wikipedia or google. Could anyone help?
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mcaplinger
post Sep 13 2006, 02:30 AM
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QUOTE (atelescope @ Sep 12 2006, 06:54 PM) *
I wonder why MRO's HGA is wrapped with a layer of metal (aluminium?), whcih is the same as Mars Odyssey's.

This is the so-called "radome" that protects the antenna from heating during aerobraking. MGS had one too. It's made out of aluminized kapton.


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Disclaimer: This post is based on public information only. Any opinions are my own.
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Lorne Ipsum
post Sep 17 2006, 09:15 PM
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QUOTE (mcaplinger @ Sep 12 2006, 08:30 PM) *
This is the so-called "radome" that protects the antenna from heating during aerobraking. MGS had one too. It's made out of aluminized kapton.


Close, but not quite. It's *germanium* coated kapton (aluminum would degrade the RF signal, but germanium is RF-transparent, at least at X-band). Also, the radome isn't there for aerobraking per se; during aerobraking, the heating was on the back side of the HGA (while the radome is on the front). The radome primarily exists to keep the HGA at an even temperature across the dish. Otherwise, since the HGA is normally pointed at the Earth (vs. the Sun), uneven solar illumination would cause the dish to warp a bit, messing up its shape and reducing the HGA's performance.

It's my understanding that this level of thermal control is really just needed for big dishes...

Lorne


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mcaplinger
post Sep 17 2006, 09:41 PM
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QUOTE (Lorne Ipsum @ Sep 17 2006, 02:15 PM) *
Close, but not quite. It's *germanium* coated kapton (aluminum would degrade the RF signal, but germanium is RF-transparent, at least at X-band). Also, the radome isn't there for aerobraking per se...

On the first one, fair enough. On the second, what's your source? On MGS it was definitely for aerobraking, because the MGS HGA was just the spare one from Mars Observer, and the MO one didn't have a radome. See http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mgs/movpics/atlo_...al/arrival.html -- "The radome over the high gain antenna is to protect it from the aerobraking environment."


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