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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review1 Tracker Alignment System Chris Tutt AMS-02 Project Manager
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review2 Review of Hazard Hazard to be addressed is uncontrolled use of lasers causing optical damage to personnel or equipment. Tracker Alignment System (TAS) uses a series of infrared lasers to measure relative movements of the tracker planes.
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review3 TAS System Schematic
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review4 Laser Safety Analysis Nominal Optical Hazard Distance (NOHD) calculated for TAS lasers at three key locations in the system per ANSI standard. Emission at diode window: 2.78 cm Emission at LFCR output: 4.64 cm Emission at LBBX output: 6.81 m Only LBBX output is significant distance, but that beam is trapped in tracker inner volume. Tracker inner volume has light-tight vents. All TAS hardware underneath MLI blankets.
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review5 Upper LBBXs Installed Position
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review6 TRD/UTOF Installed Position
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review7 Lower LBBX Installed Position
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review8 Lower USS Installed Position
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review9 LFCR Installed Position
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Chris TuttAMS-02 Phase II Safety Review10 Proposed Safety Controls TAS lasers are low-power, diffuse, and completely contained within tracker inner volume. No special safety controls are needed during nominal operations. LBBXs are inaccessible to ground personnel without dismantling payload. LFCRs are accessible if MLI removed, but any maintenance operations would be done by trained personnel. TAS system will only be powered on during most of KSC stay. KSC concurrence documented in Use Authorization K-GU-50101.
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