Thermal vacuum chamber
A thermal vacuum chamber is a vacuum chamber in which the radiative thermal environment is controlled.
Typically the thermal environment is achieved by passing liquids or fluids through thermal shrouds for cold temperatures or through the application of thermal lamps for high temperatures.
Thermal vacuum chambers are frequently used for testing spacecraft or parts thereof under a simulated space environment.
Examples
Thermal vacuum chambers can be found at:
- NASA's Space Environment Simulation Laboratory at the Johnson Space Center[1]
- NASA's Space Power Facility,[2] Spacecraft Propulsion Research Facility[3] and Cryogenic Propellant Tank Facility (K-Site)[4] at the Glenn Research Center
- NASA's Space Environment Simulator[5] at Goddard Space Flight Center
- NASA's DynaVac 36" T/V Chamber[6]
- The ESA Large Space Simulator[7]
See also
References
- http://oim.hq.nasa.gov/oia/scap/docs/SCAP_THERMALVAC_A_112508_508.pdf
- https://facilities.grc.nasa.gov/spf/index.html
- http://facilities.grc.nasa.gov/b2/index.html
- http://facilities.grc.nasa.gov/ksite/index.html
- https://asd.gsfc.nasa.gov/blueshift/index.php/2014/12/17/the-space-environment-simulator/
- https://mscweb.gsfc.nasa.gov/545web/Facilities/Thermal/Dynavac.html
- https://www.esa.int/esaTQM/1082551446328_facilitiesestec_0.html
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