Spacecraft May Surf Magnetic Fields 98
Maggie McKee writes "Future spacecraft may surf the magnetic fields of Earth and other planets, taking previously unfeasible routes around the solar system, according to a proposal funded by NASA's Institute for Advanced Concepts. The electrically charged craft would not need rockets or propellant of any kind. To get charged up, the spacecraft could either fire a beam of charged particles into space or simply allow a radioactive isotope to emit charged particles. Because long, thin filaments have large surface areas for holding charge, the spacecraft might look like Einstein's head — with wiry filaments sticking out at all angles — or a weird space 'stocking.'"
Last I Checked (Score:1)
Does that mean this would be better suited for terrestrial travel?
Re:Last I Checked (Score:5, Informative)
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One of these days I'll actually learn to spell or
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Just use Firefox 2, it has a spell checker built in...
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The magnetic field of the sun is pretty strong but of course is highly variable. At one point in 2005 (about the time we got the strong hurricanes) there were several Coronal Mass Ejections that left the sun riding its field at extreme speeds. By the time one of them passed earth (29 minutes after ejection) the matter was going 15% of the speed of light. By the time the same CME passed Saturn, the matter was going 30% of the speed of light.
People get this right! The solar system is electrical. The who
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Even if Pluto was downgraded from "planet" into "big rock", wouldn't it still be called Pluto ? It is Pluto's status that is in question, not name.
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Nice to see where this educational material is incorrect, but the field is still extremely weak.
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Sidenote: did they use an image of MRO with an extra 'sock' attached to it in the article? It really looks like MRO.
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Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]: Despite its slow rotation, Mercury has a relatively strong magnetic field, with a magnetic field strength 1% as strong as the Earth's.
Perhaps you mean it's not strong enough?
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Mercury's Magnetic Field (Score:2)
Mercury has no magnetic field and the one around Mars is patchy and not nearly as strong as the on here on Earth. Does that mean this would be better suited for terrestrial travel?
You are correct that Mars has a very weak, patchy magnetic field. However, Mercury does have a rather strong magnetic field. Mercury even has a magnetosphere, even though it does not have an atmosphere. In fact, the MESSENGER spacecraft [jhuapl.edu] is currently on its way to Mercury to study the planet's magnetosphere. Venus [ucla.edu], on the
not spacecraft. (Score:2, Interesting)
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Any manned mission would need a huge amount of support equipment and probably a very large ship. Putting enough fuel in orbit to speed it up would be expensive. Speeding it up this way and then shuttling the human personel in using a much smaller ship (eg a shuttle) that could catch up to that speed ansd rendevous without needing anywhere near as much fuel would certainly be possible
If its just going in a circle while it speeds up it doesn't mean its out of range for us.
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We'd start having huge astronaut endurance issues before they got anywhere cool.
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So assuming this craft would use the same technique for deceleration, once this thing got to its destination would it have to boomerang around the local star a few times before it could slow to a speed more conducive to deboarding? Or can we just expect that by the time this thing would even have accelerated enough to be useful in the first place, all human passeng
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You wouldn't be able to attach the rockets to the mothership and accelerate it to the same speed it is able to reach on it's own after 10 years
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I also rather like the other comment here of speeding it up even further by doing solar orbits before you actually put people on board - that might start to challenge how quickly we can accellerate a small ship to rendevous... but it would be very interesting!!
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If you can catch up to it, why climb on board? You're going to have the same issues decelerating at the other end too. Even as an unmanned cargo drone, sent ahead with supplies it doesn't work. The reason it's slow is itdoesn't push very hard; give it lots of mass to push and it's not slow but glacial.
This sounds great for a lightweight unmanned probe that just keeps steadily accelerating forever. Other than that I can't see it.
oh great (Score:2, Funny)
I'm not sure this "surfing the galaxy" technology is a good idea. It'll just be used to lead Galactus here to consume our planet.
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Cool! (Score:2)
Gotta get me some freaky space stockings
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Umm... capacitance of the ball made of filaments? (Score:5, Insightful)
Where did those people study Physics? It doesn't work that way.
The only surface area that matters is an equipotential surface, so in the case of "filaments sticking in all directions" it will be a roughly spherical surface formed by the ends of filaments. Within this sphere there is almost no electric field -- filaments can be seen as a kind of lightning rods, except there is no lightning because they are in vacuum. So at best they will have a larger sphere, at worst a cigar or other shape with less surface area. If one has to build a large but light sphere, he can make it out of the wire mesh -- in vacuum it won't discharge like it would in the air, where those spheres have to be smooth. Filaments or spikes can be useful for acceleration of charged particles.
As for usefulness of the whole thing, I guess, you can use this for steering the spaceship, however the analogy to surfing is very poor. Surfboards can accelerate by absorbing the energy of waves moving from deep to shallow water. This thing flies through a stable magnetic field, steering by changing its electric charge. A better analogy would be a sailboat changing tacks, with gravity acting as a wind and magnetic field as water resistance.
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It would discharge in vacuum aswell, but the body is capable of holding on to a lot more charge without doing so. Lots more.
The geometry of the body still matters too, since equal charges push each other away. A corner would have a lot more electrons pushed into it, eventually causing them to "squirt" off the sharp edge or corner. This is called "corona discharge", and is what makes Tesla coils look pretty.
Re:Umm... capacitance of the ball made of filament (Score:4, Informative)
Most likely at best this will produce a cloud of electrons following a positively charged spaceship, so forces that magnetic field applies to both will almost completely compensate each other. With radioactive source of charged particles (positively or negatively charged), or electron cannon you can produce more charge on the spacecraft, and probably it can be combined with ion engine that produces charged particles anyway.
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Though apparently, the NASA people WANT to build up a charge... Meh.
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With a radioactive source emitting alpha and beta radiation it might be possible to use two ion drives; one ejecting the positively charged alpha particles and the other ejecting the negatively charged beta particles.
For that to work, the two materials would have to emit charge at exactly the same rate (more accurate, the beta rate would have to be twice the alpha rate, because alpha has twice the charge of beta). You could place just the right amount of two materials to INITIALLY have the same rate, bu
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Re:Umm... capacitance of the ball made of filament (Score:2)
Carl Sagan said that the ship would look like a dandelion, so it's going to look like a dandelion, physics be damned!
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Spacecraft charging and attitude control (Score:2)
Within this sphere there is almost no electric field -- filaments can be seen as a kind of lightning rods, except there is no lightning because they are in vacuum.
Space is not as empty as people think. The near-Earth space environment, and the space environments of any planet with a magnetosphere, are full of plasma. As a result, spacecraft charging and electrical discharges (think lightning) are a problem for spacecraft. This problem has been studied by a lot of people, including NASA's Electromagne [nasa.gov]
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I was thinking the same thing, and searched for "Zardoz" to here. As long as it doesn't barf guns out for crazed wrestlers, we might be okay this time. (That was an LSD-inspired movie if there ever was one.)
Fixed it for you (Score:2, Informative)
I'm guessing this system will work by having an orbit that travels over the magnetic poles, as the magnetic field lines are much closer there, and reversing the charge between poles so that it doesn't end up at the same altitude as it started. One problem, the f
Remember Force=Velocity x B (magnetic field) (Score:5, Interesting)
A magnetic field will create a force normal to the velocity of a charged object. So
1. The force on any charge will be normal to the velocity, so it will move around in circles. This includes the charged spacecraft. (The field here is not homogeneous, but still, no gain in energy)
2. A current loop(i.e. a moving charge) can change the energy or be accelerated in a magnetic field.
(2) is and has been used since the first satellites were orbited to do orbital corrections, and are well understood and used. It can allow the life of the satellite to be expanded by many years.
Why would this craft not just use a long current carrying wire instead.
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Actually, this is exactly the principle of the magsail: magnetic solar sail. You deploy a long wire loop on every side of the spacecraft, circulate a current in it, and it catches the Earth's or Sun's magnetic field to propel the spacecraft.
A spacecraft using this method of propulsion could even launch in complete silence from either Pole, if it had a sufficiently large coil and current. An alternative to the wire is to use ionized gas i
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This is actually answered directly in TFA. The short anwser is that this has the potential to be much smaller.
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But unless I gave a clue on why it would be better it would not be worth very much.
Re:why wires don't work (Score:4, Insightful)
Why do I feel the need to point this out?
I know what he meant, but why did you make me reply? Damn you, EE degree, stop controlling my life!
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So your life is Slashdot?
How sad...but common
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That's probably why it didn't work then eh... somebody screwed up by using 2 different units in their calculations?
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the tether fried and detached from the shuttle.
There is only a finite amount of movable charge (electrons) inside the wire. The tether basically turned into an electric dipole. The current which flowed as the dipole formed was enough to cause heat damage. But had that damage not occurred, the current would eventually have stopped flowing, as the dipole reached its maximum magnitude.
Somebody else already pointed out the "9600 volts of current" thing. I won't go there.
no force is ever encountered par
29 comments, and no references to Eureka Seven (Score:1, Offtopic)
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Unless by "Eureka Seven" you mean "Linux" or "Beowulf Cluster", or something like that.
Important!!! Don't let the Pastafarians know this! (Score:2)
Oh no! The Pastafarians secret spaceship design has leaked out. Now all the acolytes of The Flying Spagetti Monster [venganza.org] will know the high inner circle secret that it is HE who travels by the spaceship and not that HE is the spaceship.
Let the people from DUBAI know of it... (Score:2)
They have a little fetish for cute stuff like that.
http://guide.theemiratesnetwork.com/living/dubai/
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I don't know the answer, but I'm sure the resultimg impact would be most entertaining.
just be sure (Score:1)
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Harry Harrison has suggested that humans in the distant future will wonder why we named our home world "Dirt". But anyway I can't imagine that in a future mars colony the three wire AC will come as Active (brown), Neutral (blue) and Mars (striped green/yellow). I think we will all just quietly ignore the inconsistency and call it Earth.
A few glitches in this idea: (Score:4, Informative)
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Niven and Pournelle made the point in The Mote in Gods Eye that if you build a laser boosted solar sail to travel to another star then you could use the galactic magnetic field to do a 180 degree turn, approach the target star from the opposite direction, and then use your laser boost to slow down.
In the story that wasn't used because the people running
Kooky (Score:2)
Steering? (Score:1)
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Shennanegans (Score:1)
"in this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics!"
Not a sock ... a towel! (Score:1)
Comical Idea (Score:1)
electric solar wind sail (Score:3, Informative)
OUPSSS (Score:1)
M2P2 revisited? (Score:2)
http://www.ess.washington.edu/Space/propulsion.htm l [washington.edu]