- Source: BES-5
5.180.24.3/info/bes" target="_blank">BES-5, also known as Bouk or Buk (Russian: бук, lit. 'beech'), was a Soviet thermoelectric generator that was used to power 31 satellites in the US-A (RORSAT) project. The heat source was a uranium 235 fast fission nuclear reactor (FNR).
Background
Spacecraft nuclear reactors are typically fast reactors for the following reasons. First, normal moderator materials (carbon, water) add bulk and mass which is not desirable in a spacecraft. Second, for reasons of nucleonics the fuel must be highly enriched to have a lightweight critical mass (similar to small reactor designs on nuclear submarines). Note that some of the 238U (which is fertile and not fissile) will be converted to 239Pu during operation, and this is taken into consideration during the design and while estimating the power output and design life expectancy.
Reactor design
The design of the 5.180.24.3/info/bes" target="_blank">BES-5 FNR is such that a sub-critical assembly exists into which a rod of fissile material is inserted. Feedback and monitoring of the power level will keep the reactor delayed critical and not prompt critical, which can be done by a mechanical control system.
The fuel core of the reactor was 0.24 m in diameter, 0.67 m long and weighed, as an assembly, 53 kg, and contained 35–50 kg of enriched uranium. The entire reactor, including the radiation shielding, weighed 385 kg.
The uranium fuel was more than 90% enriched 235U
and generated 3 kW of electrical power created by thermoelectric conversion of 100 kW of thermal output.
Use in space
The 5.180.24.3/info/bes" target="_blank">BES-5 reactor was used in more than 31 satellite missions to power the radar units of the US-A surveillance satellites. The reactor was designed to be boosted to a high orbit at the end of its operational life, to prevent the radioactive fuel from re-entering Earth's atmosphere.
There were several mishaps related to failures in the ejection system, most notably Kosmos 954, which scattered debris over Canada. Kosmos 1402 also re-entered the atmosphere, but burned up over the Atlantic Ocean, away from populated areas. Kosmos 1900 failed to reach its disposal orbit, and remains in low Earth orbit.
See also
Romashka reactor
SNAP-10A
TOPAZ nuclear reactor
List of nuclear power systems in space
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Nada dasar
- Bursa Efek Indonesia
- Tenaga nuklir di luar angkasa
- Blibli
- Daftar dewa-dewi Mesir
- Lippo Karawaci
- Kiswari
- Kerajaan Belanda
- B♭ (not musik)
- Angka Romawi
- BES-5
- Bes
- BlackBerry Unified Endpoint Manager
- US-A
- List of nuclear power systems in space
- Nuclear power in space
- Jeff Bes
- Radioisotope thermoelectric generator
- Bes Kallaku
- Sodium–potassium alloy
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