The Superfluid Helium On-Orbit Transfer (SHOOT) project is a secondary shuttle crossbay payload which flew on the STS-57/Endeavour mission. It was designed to develop and demonstrate the technologies required to resupply liquid helium containers in space, and to develop new technologies that may be
On-orbit superfluid transfer: preliminary results from the SHOOT flight demonstration
โ Scribed by M. DiPirro; P. Shirron; J. Tuttle
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 854 KB
- Volume
- 34
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0011-2275
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โฆ Synopsis
Preliminary results from the Superfluid On-Orbit Transfer (SHOOT) Flight Demonstration which flew on Space Shuttle STS-57 in June 1993 are presented. SHOOT demonstrated the technology required to transfer superfluid helium between Dewars in low gravity. In addition a number of components developed for SHOOT were flight proven and are now available for use on other payloads. Included in this paper are a description of the transfer process, the transfer rates and losses, observations of the differences between ground transfers and those done on-orbit, and the performance of a number of components. Among these components are liquid acquisition devices, phase separators, liquid/vapour discriminators, thermomechanical pumps, three types of valves, venturi flow meters and a heat pulse mass gauging system.
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