Flux-Pinned Orbiting Sample Concept
For a Mars sample return mission, a proposed spherical housing (Flux Pinning Orbiting Sample) will hold finger-sized test tubes of Mars material. An ascent vehicle will hold the OS (Orbiting Sample) and release it into the same orbit as a return vehicle. The return vehicle will capture the OS and clean the surface of the OS to rid of any contaminant. A flux pinning interface on the OS could provide required precision and surface coverage with the benefits of a non contacting compliant joint, potentially yielding better results than a complicated mechanical arm or other solutions.
Testbed
Experiments in Four Degrees of Freedom
Simulation Development
Theory to Model Flux Pinning
- Advanced Frozen Image Model or Frozen-Field Model
- Offers geometric parametrization to relate image locations and orientations with respect to the magnet location and orientation
- Assumes:
- Infinite plane superconductors
- No hysteresi
- Assumes:
- Offers geometric parametrization to relate image locations and orientations with respect to the magnet location and orientation
- Publications to reference
- Kordyuk, Alexander A. "Magnetic levitation for hard superconductors." Journal of Applied Physics 83.1 (1998): 610-612.
- Hull, John R., and Ahmet Cansiz. "Vertical and lateral forces between a permanent magnet and a high-temperature superconductor." Journal of applied physics 86.11 (1999): 6396-6404.
- Force and Torque on Magnetic Moment Dipoles
- Maps spatially varying magnetic field to force and torque
- Assumes: magnets are spherical/dipoles
- Publication to reference
- VILLANI, DANIEL D. "An analytic solution for the force between two magnetic dipoles." Magnetic and electrical Separation 9 (1998): 39-52.
- Landecker, Peter B., Daniel D. Villani, and Kar W. Yung. "An analytic solution for the torque between two magnetic dipoles." Physical Separation in Science and Engineering 10.1 (1999): 29-33.
- Maps spatially varying magnetic field to force and torque