Title :
Space applications of micro fabricated field emitters
Author :
Kent, B.J. ; Aplin, K.L. ; Huq, S.E. ; Stevens, R. ; Wang, L.
Author_Institution :
Space Sci. & Technol. Dept., Rutherford Appleton Lab., Chilton, UK
Abstract :
In this paper, four space based uses of field emitters are described; two of them are field emitting electron sources and two emit ions. Of the electron emitters one is inside the Ptolemy mass spectrometer which was launched in March 2004 on the Rosetta satellite and for the past year has been travelling on its way to a comet Churymov-Gerasimenko in the outer solar system; and the other is still in preparation to provide charge balance for the LISA system of satellites that will measure gravitational waves from colliding black holes and the first instant of the big bang. The two field emitting ion sources are similar types of microthruster used to provide an exceptionally gravitationally quiet environment in order to carry out high precision physics experiments which can only be carried out in space, free from the effects of gravitational noise present in terrestrial laboratories. These examples are selected to illustrate the overhead involved in developing robust, advanced technologies such as field emitter arrays for use in space instrumentation in which fault tolerance and system redundancy must be built in, as recovery and repair is never an option.
Keywords :
aerospace instrumentation; field emitter arrays; gravitational wave detectors; mass spectrometers; Churymov-Gerasimenko comet; LISA system; Ptolemy mass spectrometer; Rosetta satellite; big bang; charge balance; colliding black holes; fault tolerance; field emitting electron sources; field emitting ion sources; gravitational noise; gravitational waves; gravitationally quiet environment; high precision physics experiments; microfabricated field emitters; microthruster; solar system; space applications; space instrumentation; system redundancy; terrestrial laboratories; Charge measurement; Current measurement; Electron guns; Electron sources; Ion sources; Mass spectroscopy; Physics; Satellites; Solar system; Space technology;
Conference_Titel :
Vacuum Nanoelectronics Conference, 2005. IVNC 2005. Technical Digest of the 18th International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8397-4
DOI :
10.1109/IVNC.2005.1619495