论文标题
碎屑i:对微弱地球同步碎片的调查
DebrisWatch I: A survey of faint geosynchronous debris
论文作者
论文摘要
卫星和火箭尸体表现出的最近的异常表明,在没有天然去除机制的地球同步(GEO)高度上存在着微弱的碎屑。尽管以前的光学调查探测到大约10-20厘米左右,但在GEO处定期监测微弱的来源是具有挑战性的,因此我们的知识仍然很少。我们必须继续使用大型望远镜探索微弱的碎屑种群,以更好地了解主动地理卫星带来的风险。为此,我们介绍了对加那利群岛拉帕尔玛(La Palma)的2.54 m Isaac Newton望远镜进行的对地理区域进行的调查。我们探测到21个视觉幅度(假设兰伯特(Lambertian)的反照率为0.1,大约10厘米),在整个八个夜晚的深色灰色时间内,揭开了129个轨道轨道,并带有地质样运动,包括调查。我们的亮度分布的微弱末端继续上升,直到达到传感器的灵敏度极限,这表明模态亮度甚至可能是淡淡的。我们发现了许多淡淡的,未经策略的物体,这些物体显示出快速滚动的光度特征,其中许多物体跨越了一次暴露过程中调查的限制幅度,在估计物体大小时提出了一个复杂的问题。这项工作介绍了DeBrisWatch的第一部分,Driswatch是沃里克大学与国防科学技术实验室(英国)之间持续的合作,研究了地理碎片的微弱人群。
Recent anomalies exhibited by satellites and rocket bodies have highlighted that a population of faint debris exists at geosynchronous (GEO) altitudes, where there are no natural removal mechanisms. Despite previous optical surveys probing to around 10-20 cm in size, regular monitoring of faint sources at GEO is challenging, thus our knowledge remains sparse. It is essential that we continue to explore the faint debris population using large telescopes to better understand the risk posed to active GEO satellites. To this end, we present photometric results from a survey of the GEO region carried out with the 2.54 m Isaac Newton Telescope in La Palma, Canary Islands. We probe to 21st visual magnitude (around 10 cm, assuming Lambertian spheres with an albedo of 0.1), uncovering 129 orbital tracks with GEO-like motion across the eight nights of dark-grey time comprising the survey. The faint end of our brightness distribution continues to rise until the sensitivity limit of the sensor is reached, suggesting that the modal brightness could be even fainter. We uncover a number of faint, uncatalogued objects that show photometric signatures of rapid tumbling, many of which straddle the limiting magnitude of our survey over the course of a single exposure, posing a complex issue when estimating object size. This work presents the first instalment of DebrisWatch, an ongoing collaboration between the University of Warwick and the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (UK) investigating the faint population of GEO debris.