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When the space shuttle Endeavour launched today it carried with it a
set of experiments designed and constructed in the laboratory of Dennis
Jacobs, a University of Notre Dame professor of chemistry and biochemistry
who also serves as a vice president and associate provost.
The experiments are part of the Materials International Space Station
Experiment (MISSE), a multi-institutional collaboration to explore how
materials degrade in the low-earth orbit spacecraft environment.
The 16-day mission will be NASA’s longest space station trip and will
include five space walks by the crew of seven, the most ever while a
shuttle is docked to a station. The Notre Dame experiments occupy a prized
spot, alongside the installation of a Japanese research module and the
delivery of a two-armed Canadian robot to the orbiting International Space
Station.
Appropriately for a research effort from the home of the Fighting
Irish, astronauts will perform a space walk on St. Patrick’s Day (March
17) to install the MISSE-6 experiment outside the space station, where it
will fly for approximately one year. Every 20 minutes during the next
year, the experiment will gather important data on a variety of materials
involved in the experiment.
On a later shuttle mission, a different team of astronauts will
retrieve the MISSE-6 experiment and bring it back to earth for further
analysis. Jacobs and other researchers will then be able to examine
closely the kind of degradation that transpired in space.
“Contrary to popular belief, the low-earth orbit spacecraft environment
is a hostile one where energetic atoms, ions, electrons, and radiation
bombard the surfaces of a satellite,” Jacobs said. “Over time, these
corrosive components will degrade and erode most materials.
“We have devised a set of knock-out experiments that remove different
portions of the flux of energetic particles that irradiate the external
surfaces of a spacecraft. This will allow us to isolate how each component
of the low-earth orbit environment contributes to the overall degradation
of each material specimen. By understanding the detailed mechanistic
pathway through which a variety of materials are eroded in space, we hope
to guide the development of next-generation satellite materials that will
be durable in space.”
Jacobs’ laboratory research involves the study of non-thermal processes
at the gas/solid interface. He previously had a one-year experiment
conducted on the International Space Station in 2005-06.
Contact: Dennis Jacobs, vice president and associate provost, professor
of chemistry and biochemistry, 574-631-8023,
Jacobs.2@nd.edu.
From: William G. Gilroy, assistant director of news and information
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