Papers by David Gutierrez
Space Science …, 2011
NASA's LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission was designed to explo... more NASA's LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission was designed to explore the nature of previously detected enhanced levels of hydrogen near the lunar poles. The LCROSS mission impacted the spent upper stage of the launch vehicle ...
Space Science …, 2011
NASA's LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission was designed to explo... more NASA's LCROSS (Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite) mission was designed to explore the nature of previously detected enhanced levels of hydrogen near the lunar poles. The LCROSS mission impacted the spent upper stage of the launch vehicle ...
Network, IEEE, Mar 1, 2012
Rapidly increasing traffic demands of current residential and business applications and newly evo... more Rapidly increasing traffic demands of current residential and business applications and newly evolving services require access network solutions that can offer dramatically higher bandwidth. New applications tend to be media-rich such as high-definition television (HDTV), video on demand (VoD), voice over IP (VoIP), and high-speed Internet. Emerging applications include multimedia conferencing, multiplayer online gaming, online content generation, and consumer-oriented cloudcomputing solutions, and are even more ...
Acta Astronautica, 2011
Optical surveys have identified a class of high area-to-mass ratio (HAMR) objects in the vicinity... more Optical surveys have identified a class of high area-to-mass ratio (HAMR) objects in the vicinity of the Geostationary Earth Orbit (GEO) ring [1]. The exact origin and nature of these objects are not well known, although their proximity to the GEO ring poses a hazard to active GEO satellites. Due to their high area-to-mass ratios, solar radiation pressure perturbs their orbits in ways that makes it difficult to predict their orbital trajectories over periods of time exceeding a week. To better understand these objects and their origins, observations that allow us to derive physical characteristics are required in order to improve the non-conservative force modeling for orbit determination and prediction. Information on their temperatures, areas, emissivities, and albedos may be obtained from thermal infrared, mid-wave infrared (MWIR), and visible measurements. Spectral features may help to identify the composition of the material, and thus possible origins for these objects. We have collected observational data on various HAMR objects from the AMOS observatory 3.6 m AEOS telescope. The thermal-IR spectra of these low-earth orbit objects acquired by the Broadband Array Spectrograph System (BASS) span wavelengths 3-13 mm and constitute a unique data set, providing a means of measuring, as a function of time, object fluxes. These, in turn, allow temperatures and emissivity-area products to be calculated. In some instances we have also collected simultaneous filtered visible photometric data on the observed objects. The multi-wavelength observations of the objects provide possible clues as to the nature of the observed objects. We describe briefly the nature and status of the instrumental programs used to acquire the data, our data of record, our data analysis techniques, and our current results, as well as future plans.
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Papers by David Gutierrez