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Solar Sails Might be the Future of Space Travel

Posted by Ty Colfax - Thursday, July 31, 2008 10:48 AM

People smarter than us are saying the future of space travel may be in solar sailing. It's not a totally new concept, however, as Johannes Kepler's ideas about using solar wind to go great distances was first posited back in the 16th century.

But as technology has advanced, we've come to see that harnessing solar energy is a great lightweight way to drift at incredibly high speeds, utilizing the relative low drag of empty space and the gravitational slings of heavenly bodies to go large distances.

NASA's Voyager One which launched way back in the 70s is now about 10 billion miles from Earth traveling at 10.6 miles per second or 38,160 miles per hour. This ship, however, uses radioactive fuel instead of solar wind and just as its reaching interstellar space in 2025, it will run out of fuel and drift uncontrollably with no means to communicate with Earth.

There are 3 different types of space sails currently in the works, some of which will get their day in the sun very soon. Launching in under a week will be Nanosail-D aboard a Falcon 1 rocket. This solar powered sail, developed by NASA with the help of $30 million, will be the first ever deployed and tested in space. It takes the classic form of a sail as a 100 sq. ft. solar ray catching wall.

Pekka Janhunen at the Finnish Meteorological Institute is developing an electric sail composed of tiny aluminum or copper alloy wires that will catch the sun's energy and focus it into a gun propulsion system sending whatever it is attached to beyond the reaches of Pluto in under 5 years.

The third type of sail is magnetic and it's creation seems a little far off into the future. It proposes creating an electromagnetic field around an object, like a spaceship, and using the solar energy's deflection off the magnetic field to shoot the object at high speeds. The hitch is the superconducting wires to create a magnetic field of this much power has never been developed.

So, while this technology is a long time in the planning and merely in its infancy as far as implementation, Louis Friedman, executive director of the Planetary Society tells us that solar sails are, "the only technology that we know of that can one day take us to the stars."

sciam.com: Voyaging to the Stars on a Solar Breeze




Comment(s)


Posted by altizar - Thursday, July 31, 2008 11:15 AM
Not a bad idea, but the problem comes when you want to stop. The solar wind blows 1 way, and you can't really tack like you can in water. So your going to have to carry a bunch of fuel to stop or shift direction.

Posted by SilentSniper - Thursday, July 31, 2008 11:25 AM
cool, altizar has a point tho

Posted by Slaytanic40oz - Thursday, July 31, 2008 12:05 PM
The solar winds blowing from the target star would have the effect of slowing you down as they are blowing in the opposite direction that you are travelling. It would still take as long to break as it would to start moving in the first place though. Those things would go 0 to 60 in days.

Posted by Ty Colfax - Thursday, July 31, 2008 12:25 PM
well, thanks to the gravitational pull of objects in space, you can slingshot and change direction if you plan ahead and get your math right.

Posted by Ty Colfax - Thursday, July 31, 2008 12:36 PM
well, thanks to the gravitational pull of objects in space, you can slingshot and change direction if you plan ahead and get your math right.

Posted by darthrevan1138 - Thursday, July 31, 2008 12:50 PM
Cool just like in Star Wars 2

Posted by Wallis79 - Thursday, July 31, 2008 3:02 PM
Soon we'll be "sailing" across the cosmos like Captain Ben Sisko and his son did in Star Trek DS9, lol.
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Posted by collinE - Thursday, July 31, 2008 3:15 PM
it's a good idea for the solar system but extra solar travel still isn't possible.

for one, you couldn't get going fast enough to make a trip to another star worth it. Our grand kids probably wouldn't even see the day when the ship reaches another system.

for two, if you did go fast enough, you need a shield that would protect it. At high speeds, space dust would eventually tear that ship to pieces even with meters of steel protecting it.

Posted by dvorax - Thursday, July 31, 2008 3:57 PM
hopefully the nanosail-D will deploy correctly. it is only the "first" because all of the previous attempts have failed for one reason or another.

and as for the comment from altizar, the solar wind does blow in one direction, but since all craft using such methods would need to start out in an orbit around the sun, as with all spacecraft, you actually speed up or slow down relative to your orbit and use that to transfer to higher or lower orbits around the sun. basically, you tilt the sail one way to make you go faster around the sun and then move out toward mars, jupiter, etc. and you tilt the other way if you want to slow down and move toward venus and mercury.

Posted by mercisan - Thursday, July 31, 2008 11:56 PM
Great, bunch of physics freaks. God I hate that subject.

All I see in that picture is the Umbrella corporation logo. We're doomed :(

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