On the Thermal Protection Systems of Landers for Venus Exploration
- Authors: Ekonomov A.P.1, Ksanfomality L.V.1
-
Affiliations:
- Space Research Institute
- Issue: Vol 52, No 1 (2018)
- Pages: 37-43
- Section: Article
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/0038-0946/article/view/170937
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0038094617060016
- ID: 170937
Cite item
Abstract
The landers of the Soviet Venera series—from Venera-9 to Venera-14—designed at the Lavochkin Association are a man-made monument to spectacular achievements of Soviet space research. For more than 40 years, they have remained the uneclipsed Soviet results in space studies of the Solar System. Within the last almost half a century, the experiments carried out by the Venera-9 to Venera-14 probes for studying the surface of the planet have not been repeated by any space agency in the world, mainly due to quite substantial technical problems. Since that time, no Russian missions with landers have been sent to Venus either. On Venus, there is an anoxic carbon dioxide atmosphere, where the pressure is 9.2 MPa and the temperature is 735 K near the surface. A long-lived lander should experience these conditions for an appreciable length of time. What technical solutions could provide a longer operation time for a new probe investigating the surface of Venus, if its thermal scheme is constructed similar to that of the Venera series? Onboard new landers, there should be a sealed module, where the physical conditions required for operating scientific instruments are maintained for a long period. At the same time, new high-temperature electronic equipment that remains functional under the above-mentioned conditions have appeared. In this paper, we consider and discuss different variants of the system for a long-lived sealed lander, in particular, the absorption of the penetrating heat due to water evaporation and the thermal protection construction for the instruments with intermediate characteristics.
Keywords
About the authors
A. P. Ekonomov
Space Research Institute
Email: leksanf@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 117997
L. V. Ksanfomality
Space Research Institute
Author for correspondence.
Email: leksanf@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 117997
Supplementary files
