Abstract
Dust impacts on spacecraft are commonly detected by antenna instruments
as transient voltage perturbations. The signal waveform is generated by
the interaction between the impact-generated plasma cloud and the
elements of the antenna – spacecraft system. A general electrostatic
model is presented that includes the two key elements of the
interaction, namely the charge recollected from the impact plasma by the
spacecraft and the fraction electrons and cations that escape to
infinity. The clouds of escaping electrons and cations generate induced
signals, and their vastly different escape speeds are responsible for
the characteristic shape of the waveforms. The induced signals are
modeled numerically for the geometry of the system and the location of
the impact. The model employs a Maxwell capacitance matrix to keep track
of the mutual interaction between the elements of the system. A new
reduced-size model spacecraft is constructed for laboratory measurements
using the dust accelerator facility. The model spacecraft is equipped
with four antennas: two operating in a monopole mode, and one pair
configured as a dipole. Submicron-sized iron dust particles accelerated
to > 20 km/s are used for test measurements, where the
waveforms of each antenna are recorded. The electrostatic model provides
a remarkably good fit to the data using only a handful of physical
fitting parameters, such as the escape speeds of electrons and cations.
The presented general model provides the framework for analyzing antenna
waveforms and is applicable for a range of space missions investigating
the distribution of dust particles in relevant environments.