Optical effects of the operation of the onboard engine of the Progress M-17M spacecraft at thermospheric heights
- Authors: Mikhalev A.V.1, Khakhinov V.V.1, Beletskii A.B.1, Lebedev V.P.1
-
Affiliations:
- Institute of Solar–Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch
- Issue: Vol 54, No 2 (2016)
- Pages: 105-110
- Section: Article
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/0010-9525/article/view/153320
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0010952516020039
- ID: 153320
Cite item
Abstract
This paper presents the results of optical observations in the active space experiment “Radar-Progress” on April 17, 2013, after switching on the approach-correction engine of the Progress M-17M cargo spacecraft at thermospheric heights (412 km), are presented in this paper. During engine operation, a region of enhanced emission intensity has been recorded. It was presumably related to the scatter of twilight solar emission at the engine exhausts in the cargo spacecraft orbit and, probably to the occurrence of an additional emission in the atomic oxygen line [OI] 630 nm. The maximum observed dimensions of the emission region were ~350 and ~250 km along the orbit and across it, respectively. The velocity of the expansion of the emission region at the first moments after the initiation of engine operation was ~7 and ~3.5 km/s along the orbit and across it, respectively. The maximum intensity of the disturbed region is estimated to be a value equivalent to ~40–60 R within the spectral band of 2 nm. No optical manifestation, which would exceed the natural variations in brightness of the night airglow and which would be related to possible large-scale modification of the ionosphere, was detected in the natural emission lines [O] 557.7 and 630.0 nm in a zone remote from the place of injection of engine exhausts.
About the authors
A. V. Mikhalev
Institute of Solar–Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch
Author for correspondence.
Email: mikhalev@iszf.irk.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Lermontova 126a, Irkutsk, 664033
V. V. Khakhinov
Institute of Solar–Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch
Email: mikhalev@iszf.irk.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Lermontova 126a, Irkutsk, 664033
A. B. Beletskii
Institute of Solar–Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch
Email: mikhalev@iszf.irk.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Lermontova 126a, Irkutsk, 664033
V. P. Lebedev
Institute of Solar–Terrestrial Physics, Siberian Branch
Email: mikhalev@iszf.irk.ru
Russian Federation, ul. Lermontova 126a, Irkutsk, 664033
Supplementary files
