Start-Up Behaviors in the CAPL 2 Flight Experiment

972328

7/1/1997

Authors
Abstract
Content
The CAPL 2 Flight Experiment, flown on Space Shuttle STS-69 in 1995, was a flight demonstration of a full-scale prototype of a thermal control system planned for the Earth Observing System (EOS-AM) instruments Flight tests successfully demonstrated various CPL operations with simulated EOS-AM power profiles, including baseline and backup start-up procedures. In general, there were no significant differences in CPL performance between one-G and zero-G. However, some unusual behaviors were observed in several start-ups during the flight test. This paper describes CAPL 2 start-ups in detail, and offers explanations for the notably different zero-G behaviors.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/972328
Citation
Ku, J. and Hoang, T., "Start-Up Behaviors in the CAPL 2 Flight Experiment," International Conference On Environmental Systems, Lake Tahoe, Nevada, United States, July 14, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/972328.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
7/1/1997
Product Code
972328
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English