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#25a.     The Triad Spacecraft


  (Files in red–history)

           Index

22. "Wind" s/c

23. The Tail

24. Substorms

25. Auroral Currents

25H. Birkeland Currents

25a. Triad

25b. Io Dynamo

25c. Space tether

26. Polar Caps

26H. Birkeland, 1895

27. Aurora from Space

28. Aurora Origin
        Triad, launched September 2, 1972, was an experimental spacecraft designed to move in an accurately predictable low-altitude orbit, allowing its position to be used as a reference point in navigation.

        If the orbit were entirely determined by the Earth's gravity, it would be easy to calculate and predict. At low altitudes, however, the air resistance from the fringes of the atmosphere is not entirely negligible, and neither it nor the effect of sunlight pressure can be accurately predicted. Triad had floating inside it a "proof mass," a gold-platinum sphere about an inch across, which, being completely enclosed, was affected neither by air resistance nor by sunlight. Even the feeble gravitational attraction of the rest of the satellite was taken into account, by moving the power supply, radio etc. (including the magnetometer) to the ends of two long booms, on opposite sides of the "proof mass".

        While the "proof mass" thus moved in an accurately predictable orbit, the spacecraft itself was subject to air resistance and sunlight pressure, causing it to move slightly differently. Electronic sensors would note when the floating ball approached one of the walls of its "cage", and thrustors would be fired to move the spacecraft away from the ball. By thus matching its motion to that of the "proof mass", the satellite moved as if no extra disturbing forces existed.


    This experiment worked until the spacecraft ran out of fuel. However, the spacecraft was tracked for many years afterwards, because of the value of its magnetometer observations.


Last updated 25 November 2001
Re-formatted 3-13-2006

Above is background material for archival reference only.

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