I am not specialize in charge body, I don't think the charge of a spacecraft is minuscule. We used to find loose pieces of copper or solder spat on the pcb with arc test, we arc at about 10KV on the high voltage terminal, we turn off the light and look for arc in the unexpected place, you can find the floating piece this way. I joked and called this the sympathetic arc, where a floating piece of conductor got charge up without touching HV in air and if you give it enough dV/dt, it will jump! We had fun playing with that. A big body like a spacecraft , it can hold an enormous amount of charge. Think of charging up a capacitor. I design hifi amp, I have about 60,000uF cap on the rail, I accidentally shorted with a screw driver and it was a big arc and part of the screw driver tips and the place I short it disappeared! that's only 31V! Try the body charged to beyond 30KV, a big body with lots of surface area.