Kenton Greene, University of Iowa, image via Iowa Space Grant Consortium
A leading space physics journal recently published a paper written by Graduate Research Assistant Kenton Greene, who devised a low-cost method to understand how temperature changes experienced in space affect fluxgate magnetometer measurements. Self Bonding Winding Wire
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The article “On the Impact of Thermal Gradients Across Fluxgate Sensors on In Situ Magnetic Field Measurements” was published June, 16 2023 in the Journal of Geophysical Research - Space Physics.
Greene was the lead author of the paper; Aerospace Project Engineer Christian Hansen and Assistant Professor David Miles were co-authors.
Fluxgate magnetometers are important tools for studying magnetic fields in space. However, when a fluxgate sensor is exposed to changing temperatures on-orbit, the baseline measurement can be unstable, making it harder to accurately measure small magnetic fields. Some fluxgates are theorized to experience on-orbit instabilities that are related, not just to the average temperature of the sensor, but also to differences in temperature across the sensor.
Greene and the research team used a laboratory testing method to explore the relationship of temperature differences across a sensor to changes in the instability of the measurement. While they observed a strong relationship between changes in instability and the average temperature of the sensor, they did not observe a meaningful relationship between instability and differences in temperature across the sensor. This research helps us understand how to calibrate and correct on-orbit magnetic field measurements.
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