| Literature DB >> 29755144 |
S D Bale1,2, K Goetz3, P R Harvey1, P Turin1, J W Bonnell1, T Dudok de Wit4, R E Ergun5, R J MacDowall6, M Pulupa1, M Andre7, M Bolton5, J-L Bougeret8, T A Bowen1,2, D Burgess9, C A Cattell3, B D G Chandran10, C C Chaston1, C H K Chen11, M K Choi6, J E Connerney6, S Cranmer5, M Diaz-Aguado1, W Donakowski1, J F Drake12, W M Farrell6, P Fergeau4, J Fermin1, J Fischer1, N Fox13, D Glaser1, M Goldstein6, D Gordon1, E Hanson1,2, S E Harris1, L M Hayes1, J J Hinze3, J V Hollweg10, T S Horbury11, R A Howard14, V Hoxie5, G Jannet4, M Karlsson5, J C Kasper15, P J Kellogg3, M Kien5, J A Klimchuk6, V V Krasnoselskikh4, S Krucker1, J J Lynch3, M Maksimovic8, D M Malaspina5, S Marker1, P Martin4, J Martinez-Oliveros1, J McCauley1, D J McComas16, T McDonald1, N Meyer-Vernet8, M Moncuquet8, S J Monson3, F S Mozer1, S D Murphy6, J Odom6, R Oliverson6, J Olson1, E N Parker17, D Pankow1, T Phan1, E Quataert18, T Quinn1, S W Ruplin19, C Salem1, D Seitz1, D A Sheppard6, A Siy1, K Stevens5, D Summers5, A Szabo6, M Timofeeva4, A Vaivads7, M Velli20, A Yehle5, D Werthimer1, J R Wygant3.
Abstract
NASA's Solar Probe Plus (SPP) mission will make the first in situ measurements of the solar corona and the birthplace of the solar wind. The FIELDS instrument suite on SPP will make direct measurements of electric and magnetic fields, the properties of in situ plasma waves, electron density and temperature profiles, and interplanetary radio emissions, amongst other things. Here, we describe the scientific objectives targeted by the SPP/FIELDS instrument, the instrument design itself, and the instrument concept of operations and planned data products.Entities:
Keywords: Coronal heating; Solar Probe Plus
Year: 2016 PMID: 29755144 PMCID: PMC5942226 DOI: 10.1007/s11214-016-0244-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Space Sci Rev ISSN: 0038-6308 Impact factor: 8.017
Level 1 requirements for the FIELDS instrument suite
| Measurement | Dynamic range | Cadence | Bandwidth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Magnetic Field | 140 dB | 100k vectors/s | DC–50 kHz |
| Electric Field | 140 dB | 2M vectors/s | DC–1 MHz |
| Plasma Waves | 140 dB | 1 spectrum/s | 5 Hz–1 MHz |
| QTN/Radio | 100 dB for QTN | 1 spectrum/4 s for QTN | 10–2500 kHz for QTN |
| 80 dB for radio | 1 spectrum/16 s for radio | 1–16 MHz for radio |
Fig. 1Radial evolution of (a) magnetic field intensity, (b) solar wind velocity, (c) proton density, and (d) proton temperature. Diamonds represent data from Helios 1 binned in distance, and the error bars are the standard deviation for each bin. Model extrapolations are shown in each panel
Expected typical values for plasma parameters and other derived quantities to be measured by FIELDS at different heliocentric distances. δB and δE are expectations for large Alfvénic fluctuations. δE is the expected level of wave electric field fluctuations given a scaling that assumes constant energy density
| Parameters | 10 | 55 | 1 AU | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Magnetic Field | 2000 nT | 70 nT | 6 nT | |
| Electric Field | 100 mV/m | 30 mV/m | 3 mV/m | |
| Density | 7000 cm−3 | 120 cm−3 | 7 cm−3 | |
| Electron Temperature | 85 eV | 25 eV | 8 eV | |
| Solar Wind Speed | 210 km/s | 400 km/s | 450 km/s | |
| Alfvén Speed | 500 km/s | 125 km/s | 45 km/s | |
| Plasma Frequency | 750 kHz | 100 kHz | 24 kHz | |
| Electron Gyrofrequency | 60 kHz | 2 kHz | 160 Hz | |
| Proton Gyrofrequency | 32 Hz | 1 Hz | 0.1 Hz | |
| Convected Debye Length | 4 μs | 8 μs | 22 μs | |
| Convected Electron Inertial Length | 0.3 ms | 1.2 ms | 5.5 ms | |
| Convected Proton Inertial Length | 13 ms | 50 ms | 250 ms | |
| Convected Proton Gyroscale | 3 ms | 30 ms | 200 ms | |
| DC/LF Electric Fluctuations | 1 V/m | 10 mV/m | 1 mV/m | |
| Kinetic Electric Fluctuations | 1 V/m | 70 mV/m | 10 mV/m |
Fig. 2Estimates of the magnetic field fluctuation spectra at 54, 20 and 10 solar radii, together with the instruments MAG and SCM noise levels. These expected turbulence levels were obtained from breakpoint scalings. Also shown are the expected magnetic field fluctuation levels from shocks, reconnection fields, strong whistlers and z-modes over the SPP orbit
Fig. 3The electric potential surrounding a simple model of the SPP spacecraft near perihelion [see Ergun et al. 2010 for details on the simulation]. The X-direction is toward the sun. The Y-direction is the orbital track of the spacecraft. Color represents potential in volts. The thick black lines depict the electric field antennas. The plasma density is 7000 cm−3, the electron temperature is 85 eV and the ion temperature is 85 eV. The solar wind speed is 200 km/s and the spacecraft orbital speed is 180 km/s. The plot is in the frame of the spacecraft
Fig. 4FIELDS uses 5 voltage and 3 magnetic sensors to measure electric and magnetic fields. The four V1–V4 sensors are deployed into full sunlight near the base of the SPP heat shield (TPS). A search coil magnetometer (SCM) is mounted at the end of the instrument boom. Two fluxgate magnetometers (MAGi and MAGo) and a simple voltage sensor V5 are also mounted on the boom
Fig. 5The FIELDS suite block diagram. Boom-mounted sensors are diagrammed in the upper left dotted box; these sensors are fixed to the boom and deploy with it. The four TPS-plane electric field/voltage sensors are deployed by actuation from the spacecraft. The Main Electronics Package (MEP) at the bottom is mounted within the spacecraft body and consists of two sides—FIELDS_1 and FIELDS_2—providing some redundancy in the case of power supply or computer failure. FIELDS also has a dedicated interface to the SWEAP instrument. Color-coding indicates institutional responsibility of each hardware component
Fig. 16Expected signal levels across the quasi-thermal noise and radio frequency spectrum. Three colored bands show the expected intensity of radio emission associated with interplanetary type III radio bursts and 40 R (lavender), 20 R (green), and 10 R (orange) and spectra of quasi-thermal noise (same color scheme). The spacecraft-level RE02 EMC level is shown as a solid black line. Narrow-band ‘spikes’ rising to the RE02 level show the allowable noise contamination (per system EMC specification). The FIELDS Radio Frequency Spectrometer (RFS) instrument will measure this spectrum and reject the noise signals using a Polyphase Filter Bank
Fig. 6A CAD drawing of a V1–V4 antenna unit. The whip (colored green here) is the sensor and extends 2 meters beyond the end of the 30 cm stub. The stub acts as an electrical and thermal isolator. The niobium C103 whip signal is carried back through a small, pure niobium wire contained in the stub to the preamplifier at the base. A heat shield shadows the stub, allowing it to radiate excess heat from the whip, while another shield supports blanketing that blocks heat radiating from the TPS
Fig. 7A CAD drawing of the V5 voltage sensor. Two short tubes act as a single (electrically tied) sensor to measure the plasma voltage. A simple preamplifier is housed in an attached enclosure. The tubes can be current-biased and the preamp enclosure can be voltage-biased
Fig. 8A simplified schematic of the V1–V4 electric preamplifier circuit. A signal from the antenna whip is fed into 3 separate channels that feed the DFB, TDS, and RFS receivers. The LF side using a floating voltage system to accommodate the large expected plasma voltage variations. The grey box in the upper left represents the plasma voltage signal and sheath impedance, and some estimated values of the sheath resistance are shown in the table within the figure
Fig. 9CAD drawing of a SPP MAG sensor, showing the composite structure supporting the two bobbins and electronics board (green) inside the composite cover. Also seen are two of the three kinetic mounts supporting the sensor on the composite 4-hole mounting plate, the alignment cube, and the pigtail harness that connects to the spacecraft harness
Fig. 10A schematic of the spacecraft magnetometer boom and sensors, shown deployed. Two fluxgate magnetometers are located at 1.9 m (MAGi) and 2.72 m (MAGo) from the rear deck of the spacecraft. The V5 voltage sensor is at 3.08 m and the search coil magnetometer (SCM) is located at the end of the boom: 3.5 m from the spacecraft. This is a relatively short boom, constrained to remain in the spacecraft umbra at perihelion. SCM data will require special processing to remove the drive signal from the fluxgates
Fig. 11Engineering model of the search-coil magnetometer (SCM) for SPP
Fig. 12Measured sensitivity (in red) and frequency response (in blue) of SCM. The curves on the left are for the ELV/VLF antenna and the curves on the right for the LF/MF one. The highest measurable levels are 3000 nT in the ELF/VLF range, and 100 nT in the LF/MF range
Fig. 13A photograph of the engineering model (EM) of the FIELDS main electronics package and V1–V4 preamps. The individual boards are labeled
Fig. 14A block diagram of the DFB. The DFB processes 26 input signals into a Teledyne SIDECAR ASIC at 150 kSa/s and performs digital signal processing to produce spectral and cross-spectral matrices, in addition to time series data
DFB output signals available to digital signal processing
| DFB output signal | Description |
|---|---|
| DC-coupled antenna voltages | |
| AC-coupled voltages | |
| DC coupled differential voltages, low gain | |
| DC coupled differential voltages, high gain | |
| AC coupled differential voltages | |
| Orthogonal SCM axes, low frequency windings, low gain | |
| Orthogonal SCM axes, low frequency windings, high gain | |
| SCM × axis, medium frequency winding |
An example of DFB data products in Survey Mode near SPP perihelion. Lower cadences will likely be used when SPP is further from the Sun
| Data | Sensors | Cadence |
|---|---|---|
| Waveforms | 2V,3E,3 | 128 S/NYsec |
| Power spectra | 4 AC, 4 DC | 1 spectrum/(4 s) |
| Band-pass filters | 4 AC, 4 DC | 1 S/s |
Fig. 15Block diagram of the TDS. The TDS processes 6 input signals at 1.92 MSa/s and produces waveform capture events organized and telemetered by quality. TDS also has a command and data handling (C&DH) interface to the spacecraft computer and can take over in the event of failure on the FIELDS1 side
Fig. 17Block diagram of the DCB and RFS, which occupy a single board in the MEP. The DCB is the primary data processing and management module, and interface to the spacecraft C&DH system. RFS uses the DCB computer to perform signal processing of radio frequency measurements
Fig. 19FIELDS CTG data flow diagram
Fig. 18FIELDS orbit sequence showing data acquisition and playback intervals
Fig. 20FIELDS data processing flow diagram