Abstract

The differential electrostatic space accelerometer is an equivalence principle (EP) experiment instrument proposed to operate onboard China’s space station in the 2020s. It is designed to compare the spin-spin interaction between two rotating extended bodies and the Earth to a precision of 10−12, which is five orders of magnitude better than terrestrial experiment results to date. To achieve the targeted test accuracy, the sensitive space accelerometer will use the very soft space environment provided by a quasi-drag-free floating capsule and long-time observation of the free-fall mass motion for integration of the measurements over 20 orbits. In this work, we describe the design and capability of the differential accelerometer to test weak space acceleration. Modeling and simulation results of the electrostatic suspension and electrostatic motor are presented based on attainable space microgravity condition. Noise evaluation shows that the electrostatic actuation and residual non-gravitational acceleration are two major noise sources. The evaluated differential acceleration noise is 1.01 × 10−9 m/s2/Hz1/2 at the NEP signal frequency of 0.182 mHz, by neglecting small acceleration disturbances. The preliminary work on development of the first instrument prototype is introduced for on-ground technological assessments. This development has already confirmed several crucial fabrication processes and measurement techniques and it will open the way to the construction of the final differential space accelerometer.

Highlights

  • The equivalence principle (EP) is one of fundamental hypotheses of Einstein’s general relativity.The EP experiment is significant to verify the general relativity and search for new interactions or for new gravitational potential

  • In 2001, Zhang et al developed a phenomenological model for the spin-spin interaction between rotating rigid spheres and suggested the idea for a space test of the new equivalence principle (NEP) [8]

  • We present the design and preliminary development of a NEP experiment instrument, i.e., differential electrostatic accelerometer

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Summary

Introduction

The equivalence principle (EP) is one of fundamental hypotheses of Einstein’s general relativity. A concept design of a double free-fall space NEP experiment onboard a drag-free satellite, in which two TMs made of the same material but rotated with much different angular velocity drop freely, was proposed to achieve an accuracy better than 10 ́15 [13]. This requires many challenging techniques to develop the NEP instrument, drag-free satellite, and extensive preflight testing to verify that the instrument performance can be reached once in space.

Concept of the Space Station-Based NEP Experiment
Design and Simulation of the NEP Instrument
Sensor Unit
24.94 Outer Accelerometer
Block diagram controlsystem system used a force-balanced
Electrostatic Motor
Noise Analysis
Development
Figure
The Sensing and Control Electronics
Findings
Conclusions
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