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Finnish Electric Solar Sail Nears Implementation
Posted by
Soulskill
on Wed Apr 23, 2008 01:51 PM
from the fly-me-to-the-moon dept.
from the fly-me-to-the-moon dept.
eldavojohn writes "A recent meeting held by the Finnish Meteorological Institute has resulted in plans to build an electric solar sail that will circle the Earth, gaining speed to test its acceleration. The purpose? 'A flight out of the solar system to measure the gas, dust, plasma and magnetic field in the undisturbed interstellar space would perhaps be the "flagship" thing to do,' said Pekka Janhunen, a researcher developing the sail at the FMI. The details and papers of this project (over two years in the making) are also available. I certainly hope it will show more success than the launch of the similar U.S.-Russian venture and its subsequent complete failure."
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Not quite the same thing really (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Bussard_collector [memory-alpha.org]
Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:4, Informative)
The device in TFA is truly a solar sail - it works because like charges repel each other. So if you charge up the wires with the same polarity as the solar wind - you get a pressure exerted. It's cheaper than the big sheet of shiny mylar film that we normally think of for solar sails because you only need the support wires - not the sail itself. However, the conventional solar sail needs no power whatever - where this one has to use solar panels to keep the wires charged up. Hence, this one is pretty much useless for interstellar travel.
Parent
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Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
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I doubt any solar sail, no matter the design, is going to take you much further than the termination shock, let alone between stars.
Do you mean that once having achieved the velocity it can from the flux-rich area near our star, it will simply stop? I doubt that gravity at termination shock is going to be enough to slow it down much. Remember that it will have felt that very minor push for quite a few years by then. A few grams thrust isn't very much, but that much continuous per second x60x60x24x365 x however many years it takes to get there, it's likely to be travelling at quite a clip by the time it reaches that point. It will
Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
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In Niven's setting, starships leaving Sol used light sails to get up to ramscoop speeds. Not being patient enough just to ride sunlight, they built huge lasers in the outer solar system to give them a little extra kick. When one day the kzinti arrived to raid the defenceless, unarmed, peaceful human race, these lasers were... repurposed.
Of course
Larry Niven is... (Score:1, Offtopic)
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Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
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Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
The low volume and speed of solar wind particles in comparison to sunlight does limit the performance. For example, you obviously can't go any faster than the solar wind, approx 500km/s near Earth. Th
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Well, compare the weight of 3.5 miles of wire to a square mile of plastic sail. A one-mile wire won't give you a square mile of virtual surface area.
Still, it's obviously much lighter.
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Re:Not quite the same thing really (Score:5, Insightful)
The tendrils are not for power generation.
The craft generates electricity using the solar panels which powers an electron gun. The electron gun gets rid of electrons allowing the entire spacecraft (solar sail tendrils included) to become positively charged and then catch the solar wind for propulsion.
The electron gun can also provide a tiny amount of thrust. A very tiny amount of thrust.
Parent
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Most solar sail ideas are based on photons hitting a reflective surface.
Solar wind is variable in terms of concentration and speed, which is why it tends to get downplayed a bit. You know at any distance from the sun roughly the amount of energy you will have available, it really is not that variable.
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The electric sail uses the dynamic pressure of the solar wind (proton and electron flow from the sun). The momentum of the solar wind is mainly in the protons, since electrons are ~1800x lighter. The electric sail uses charged wires (tethers) to create electrical sheet, which deflects the protons and the craft gains momentum.
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Meta Tag? (Score:4, Funny)
Where is the fly-me-to-the-outer-system-to-collect-dust-and-gas tag?
Re:Meta Tag? (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
They better be make the finish line... (Score:1)
Major problem with this (Score:2, Interesting)
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Re:Major problem with this (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Finns Finish the Solar Fin!? (Score:2)
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Nears Implementation
I heard that it was already Finnished...
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They could pull it off. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:They could pull it off. (Score:5, Funny)
In other words, look at the bowl cut on that guy in the article. With hair like that he's got to be sporting some major brainage.
Parent
Don't involve Nokia (Score:2)
Making a better solar sail (Score:4, Interesting)
and therefore faster:
http://kim.oyhus.no/Solar_sail.html [oyhus.no]
Kim Øyhus, the inventor.
Sounds ambitious... (Score:4, Funny)
That's one big sail.
Nearing implementation? (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Nearing implementation? (Score:5, Funny)
If it's nearly Finnished, does that make it Swedish?
Parent
Nordic Council (Score:2)
Naming ? (Score:1)
these bloody finns! (Score:1)
What's it this time?
Screw them, the Finns!
-- Bill, Ball And MafiAA
Garbage collection (Score:1)
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