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Paris, France (ESA) Jul 29, 2009 At the end of June the Gaia mission passed a significant milestone when the 17 individual segments of the torus, a key structural element of the spacecraft, were brazed into one coherent structure at the BOOSTEC premises at Bazet near Tarbes, France. The successful results of this process were concluded after a Mandatory Inspection Point of the torus on Monday 20 July 2009. The 3-metre diameter, quasi-octagonal torus, which will support the two Gaia telescopes and the focal plane assembly, is composed of 17 individual custom-built Silicon Carbide segments. Construction of the individual segments began 15 months ago at BOOSTEC. In the intervening period the individual segments have been milled, sintered and lapped. Each element has been subject to stringent quality checks and has undergone static-proof tests to confirm the mechanical integrity of the pieces. (See "Constructing the Gaia torus" for further details.)
Silicon carbide for light-weight, robust structures The low thermal expansion coefficient and high thermal conductivity of SiC mean that it is a very stable material which can quickly dissipate thermal gradients, and with a Young's Modulus of about 420 GPa it is twice as stiff as steel.
Final steps: assembly, alignment and brazing A special braze paste was applied to the interface points between each of the segments (Figure 3). When heated above 1000 degrees C this paste melts and seals the joints by capillary action - the torus then becomes one complete unit. The completed torus was placed in the brazing furnace at BOOSTEC on Wednesday 24 June and remained there until the morning of Monday 29 June. After a cooling-down period the torus was removed from the furnace and moved to the laboratories for post-brazing quality control. This included a thorough visual inspection of external and internal surfaces - the latter by means of borescopes - and ultrasonic inspection to confirm the integrity of the structure. (The furnace at BOOSTEC was built for brazing the Herschel 3.5-metre diameter primary mirror, and has also been used for the optical bench for the JWST NIRSPEC instrument.)
Torus complete - payload module assembly to follow Share This Article With Planet Earth
Related Links Gaia mission Space Telescope News and Technology at Skynightly.com
![]() ![]() Pasadena CA (SPX) Jul 29, 2009 The Australian government has announced that it will provide $88.4 million AUD ($72.4 million USD) to help fund the revolutionary 25-meter Giant Magellan Telescope (GMT) to be sited at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile's high-altitude Atacama Desert. This brings the funding that has been raised to date to $200 million out of approximately $700 million total needed to complete construction ... read more |
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