Judith L. Huntington
Ames Research Center
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Featured researches published by Judith L. Huntington.
Advances in Space Research | 1989
Guy Fogleman; Judith L. Huntington; Glenn C. Carle; Joseph A. Nuth
In the gravitational field on Earth, the large settling rate of micron-sized particles and the effects of gravity-induced convection prohibit many interesting studies of phenomena such as coagulation, collisions, and mutual interactions of droplets, dust grains and other particles. Examples of exobiology experiments involving these phenomena are the simulation of organic aerosol formation in Titans atmosphere, studies of the role of comets in prebiotic chemical evolution, and simulations of carbon grain interactions in various astrophysical environments. The Gas-Grain Simulation Facility (GGSF) is a proposed Earth-orbital laboratory that will allow present ground-based experimental programs which study processes involving small particles and weak interactions to be extended to a new domain. Physics issues that scientists wishing to propose GGSF experiments must consider are reviewed in this paper. Specifically, coagulation, motion in gases and vacua, and wall deposition of particles in a microgravity environment are discussed.
Advances in Space Research | 1995
Judith L. Huntington; D.M Stratton; Thomas W. Scattergood
The Gas-Grain Simulation Facility (GGSF) is a multidisciplinary experiment laboratory being developed by NASA at Ames Research Center for delivery to Space Station Freedom in 1998. This facility will employ the low-gravity environment of the Space Station to enable aerosol experiments of much longer duration than is possible in any ground-based laboratory. Studies of fractal aggregates that are impossible to sustain on Earth will also be enabled. Three research areas within exobiology that will benefit from the GGSF are described here. An analysis of the needs of this research and of other suggested experiments has produced a list of science requirements which the facility design must accommodate. A GGSF design concept developed in the first stage of flight hardware development to meet these requirements is also described.
Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 1989
Guy Fogleman; Judith L. Huntington; Glenn C. Carle
Two proposed NASA exobiology flight experiments are described in terms of the approaches to cosmic dust collection and the issues addressed by the analysis of the samples. A passive collector is planned for use with the Cosmic Dust Collection Facility, and an active system is described for attachment to the Space Station Freedom payload. Exobiological study of cosmic dust could provide insights on organic chemistry in the grains and on the relative abundances of biogenic elements in interstellar, cometary, and meteoric samples.
Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres | 1989
Judith L. Huntington; Guy Fogleman
Laboratory simulations of gas-dust interactions performed on Space Station Freedom in the Gas-Grain Simulation Facility (GGSF) are considered for studying the nature of bodies in the solar system. The GGSF includes a 4-10 liter chamber for experiments with the capability for environmental control, measurement, levitation, and energy. The simulations can provide low gas pressure and dust density in a microgravitational environment.
Archive | 1992
Glenn C. Carle; Deborah E. Schwartz; Judith L. Huntington
Archive | 1988
Glenn C. Carle; Guy Fogleman; Judith L. Huntington
Archive | 1994
Judith L. Huntington; Ken Greenwald; C. Fred Rogers; David Stratton; Brenda Simmons; Mark L. Fonda
Archive | 1999
Mark L. Fonda; Mike Petach; C. Fred Rogers; Judith L. Huntington; David Stratton; Kenji Nishioka; Mark Tipo
Archive | 1992
Glenn C. Carle; Deborah E. Schwartz; Judith L. Huntington
Archive | 1989
Guy Fogleman; Judith L. Huntington; Deborah E. Schwartz; Mark L. Fonda