Solar Sails 133
carpediem55 writes "Reuters is reporting that The Planetary Society (founded by Carl Sagan) is bringing science fiction to life, with a Solar Sail powered by light." But get how they plan to launch it: on a Russian submarine ICBM. The sponsors have a site with more information.
Re:deja wha..? (Score:1)
There's no way it's possible!!! Here's Proof! (Score:1)
In the town where I was born
Lived a man who sailed to sea
And he told us of his life
In the land of submarines
So we sailed up to the sun
Till we detonated the torpedo of green
And we crashed to the floor
In our Russian submarine
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
And our friends are all on board
Many more dead on the floor
And the water begins to flow!
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
As we gasp and try to breathe
Everyone of us has all we need
Bottle of Stoli, and a pair of jeans
In our Russian submarine.
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
We're All dying in our Russian submarine,
Russian submarine, Russian submarine
Re:Small question... (Score:1)
Might be because it's being launched from a submarine? Apart from SeaLaunch [sea-launch.com], how common are satellite launches from sea? I don't know, but I would assume they're not that common (and particularly from a submarine).
-dair
Re:Better technologies out there (Score:1)
Yep, sorry - the momentum does indeed come from photons.
However, the intensity of light falls off as 1/r^2 from the source, so you wouldn't accelerate too much before you were left floating in space.
I suppose the attraction is that as we're (relatively) close to the sun, it's a nice way to get a boost out of the inner solar system to send a probe to the outer planets. And potentially you could use an artificial source to finish the trip - once your acceleration tails off, keep pushing it with an orbital laser (or just leave it coasting along and accept it'll take longer to get there).
-dair
A better use of ICBM's? (Score:1)
They have done this before, submerged ;-) (Score:1)
Being a bit paranoid/suspicious (Score:1)
> Space Center near Moscow.
This is the first time I have heard of "Babakin Space Center"...
Tom Swift (Score:1)
http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Vault/3712/cosm
This book was printed in 1960! I love how science always seems to find ways of catching up with science fiction!
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
Also, I wonder if anyone with a better understanding of these things could talk about the implications/restrictions implied by a multi-dimensional view of the universe. Like 1) is the theory of relativity a statement of life in 3-space, or does it hold if we can decide to move in time as well? 2) String theory claims that there are 11 odd smaller dimensions. is it theoretically possible to translate a position vector to these dimensions, do a song and a dance, and arrive at your destination in a jiffy?
Re:Physical Sails = Dead Tech (Score:1)
Later,
ErikZ
Re:Wrong one! (Score:1)
Nick at Night is your friend.
Nenoo nenoo!
Swords into plowshares---IT'S A TRICK! (Score:1)
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Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
I know the original post was most likely a troll but ... ARE YOU KIDDING? Newsflash, the pristine space environment is a freaking vacuum that would kill puppies and kitties without human intervention. If we heretofore power every spacecraft sent up by all the nukes we got, we still wouldn't pump out anywhere near the radiation levels pumped out by the sun. You want to save the space environment, BAN STARS! Yeah, and if wasn't for that damn gravity, all that dust and crap wouldn't make planets on which evil sentient life forms would develop (pop into existence, your choice) who would then bring their evil polluting ways into space. YEAH, DAMN, BAN GRAVITY!
If your concerned about the "environment", be worried about the fact that the polluting effects of putting things into space come from: launch emissions; and getting rid of the payload once its useful life expires. If you really want to save the environment, talk about less polluting launch methods and about holding companies and governments liable for filling the gravity well with shrapnel.
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
"Oops, you have pushed my critique-of-western-thought button! What is it with 'conquering' everything? We have to 'conquer'the New World. We have to 'conquer' nature. We have to 'conquer' space."
Ok, so Western thought involves a rampant urge to make order from disorder by taking an active role in discovery and learning, this is what you mean right?
But then...
It's unfortunate that the west is so fatalistic.
fatalism:
1.The doctrine that all events are predetermined by fate and are therefore unalterable.
2.Acceptance of the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable.
Yep, that sounds like Western civilization alright, content to sit back and let things take care of themselves. Or wait, isn't that in direct conflict with your earlier observation?
I guess what I'm really asking is what do you have against Western thought?
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Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
Thanks...
To each his own I guess, I was only trying to understand your cultural elitism [dictionary.com] sorry to have rocked your tolerant Eastern boat.
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Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
My guesses are that you use gravity to slingshot you in the right direction - perhaps I want to go to Mercury which is towards the sun, I first have to sail towards Jupiter, slingshot around it and use the built up speed to drift to Mercury. Sound plausible? Maybe not for humans because it would take too many years, but possible for robots perhaps.
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
Sure you can. Set your sail at 45 degrees to the sun, and sunlight hits your sail and reflects off. You get thrust once as the photon hits you, and once more as the photon leaves. Setting your sail at x degrees to the sun gets you thrust at x degrees to the sun. Of course, the steeper your angle, the less sunlight you're intercepting, so the less thrust you get overall. At 90 degrees, edge-on to the sun, you get zero thrust.
It's true , however, that you can't tack in the solar wind. That's the stream of protons blowing off the sun, and those little beasties don't bounce off your sail -- they stick.
You can gain maneuverability by using a launching laser instead of (or as well as) sunlight. You can even use a launching laser at you home star to decelerate at your target star: cut part of your sail loose, and it will blow ahead of you, pushed by launching laser light. Put yourself in the reflected beam from the cut-away portion of sail, and voila, you have light hitting your sail from the opposite direction of your launching laser! (This idea isn't original with me of course; I got it from an essay by Niven or Brin or some such clever person.)
DIY Sea Launch! (far better use for subs as well) (Score:1)
But get how they plan to launch it: on a Russian submarine ICBM
Seems a damn sensible use of surplus (? ;-) ) submarines to me. Kind of a DIY version of SeaLaunch [sea-launch.com]. You could sail a whole fleet of these to the equator to get that optimal launch postion benefit. Surely a cheap way for emerging space nations to get their packages orbital.
(my rant) Seems like a far better use of submarines to me than giving them to the military... mind you reckon that's precisely the reason the big boys will be paranoid about this idea being talked about by the emerging nations...(end rant) :-)
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
It says nothing about worm holds/warp drive/hyperspace.
Re:Wrong one! (Score:1)
Incoming! (Score:1)
Re:Better technologies out there (Score:1)
However, the intensity of light falls off as 1/r^2 from the source, so you wouldn't accelerate too much before you were left floating in space.
Re:Small question... (Score:1)
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dman123 forever!
Some corrections (Score:1)
#3) An ICBM is not designed to loft a large-size payload. A set of MIRVs, while very heavy, is relatively compact.
#4) More to the point, an ICBM is not designed to deliver a payload to space. It is designed to deliver a payload to earth. Why do you think that Alan Shepard's flight lasted only 15 minutes? Because he was sitting on top of a Redstone ICBM.
First of all, the Redstone rocket, used in the first two Mercury missions was not an ICBM, prior to its use by NASA, the Redstone was referred to as the "tactical Redstone," meaning that it was a tactical (deployed on, or close to, the battlefield) rather than a strategic ICBM.
However, both the Atlas rocket, used by John Glenn's and later Mercury flights, and the Titan II rocket used for the Gemini missions were originally designed as ICBMs. The Titan II's on-board computer even included the trajectory necessary to launch a Gemini capsule into space as one of its standard pre-programmed trajectories. To say that "ICBMs are not designed to deliver payloads to orbit" is grossly inaccurate.
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
First of all, you don't need to tack with a solar sail. Once you reach the half-way point you are travelling at an insanely high speed, and you will need to begin the breaking or you'll fly past your target. Thus you turn the craft around and allow the other star to begin to slowly lower your speed by pushing against your sails. A good analogy is "air braking".
Secondly, space is currently THE most hostile environment known to man. It is alternatively extremely hot or extremely cold, and charged with lethal particles from stars and other bodies. We're not even sure we can keep people alive inside space ships for long periods of time without extensive lead shielding. I seriously doubt exploding nuclear bombs in deep space is going to compromise anything.
-17028
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
I guess what I'm really asking is what do you have against Western thought?
Good question, and I have another: What, pray tell, is this "west" you speak of? Where does it begin? Where does it end? What are its distinct and unique characteristics? How may we identify its citizens?
[irony]
"How like the east to broadly overgeneralize."
[/irony]
They should shape it as a penguin (Score:1)
Carbon Nanomesh (Score:1)
Re:Carbon Nanomesh (Score:1)
Moreso Arthur C Clarke (Score:1)
A great story on the topic. It appears in a collection of his, The Sentinel.
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
However, for moving outward from the Earth, it may be more efficient to make use of the solar wind than radiation pressure. Tacking against the solar wind it trickier, though.
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
I would never be first in that line. After all, the rule says, never buy version 1.0! All those poor suckers are going to GPF into oblivion! Wait for 1.2 at least. :)
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
"God bless Saint Liebowitz!"
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
It might seem that there is infinite velocity, but because they didn't actually have a path between the points, there isn't a velocity at all.
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Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
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Re:Sad that Amercans are reduced to this ? (Score:1)
Re:Small question... (Score:1)
like he said (Score:1)
observe how it gets thinner as it expands
compare it to a pokey stick.. still the same thickness as you push it...
tacking? (Score:1)
you can still point to windward, but you won't go there,
to do it seriously try it in a scow where the hull doesn't perform and keel-like function
you won't get very far.
Re:Small question... (Score:1)
This reduces the amount of power needed by the rocket, since the higher rotational speed of the earth at the equator gives the rocket a boost.
Isn't this a little small? (Score:1)
Enigma
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
Re:Nit pick (Score:1)
I guess it's not a solar sail, but it would give you some propulsion.
Skyhooks (Score:1)
Re:Surface to Space? (Score:1)
Not yet suitable for anything more fragile than rock/ore/steel.
Moties and pollution, two great tastes that.. (Score:1)
Poor little Moties, heh. Now there would be a culture that the word "fatalism" properly describes... and a planet that better exemplifies "despoiled".
Not only did they use a solar sail, but they also powered it for a number of years with a massive laser (so powerful that humans living in the destination solar system saw the Moties' star change color while the laser was on). A character later commented that this was like being able to leave your engines at home. A neat trick if it worked, eh.
I guess the next step up in travel is leaving yourself at home, e.g. Genesis Quest: Giant lasers not enough for you? How about modulating a star..
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:1)
You do realize space is awash with radiation from various sources right?
nope (Score:1)
It's good to see... (Score:1)
Surface to Space? (Score:1)
Tron Solar Sailer (Score:1)
Re:Small question... (Score:1)
Asikaa
Re:Better technologies out there (Score:1)
What, you've never heard of tacking?
ICBM (SLBM) What are they thinking ? (Score:1)
Re:Small question... (Score:1)
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:1)
Besides, Einstein did not prove that travel faster than light was impossible. He merely proved that travel *at* the speed of light was impossible.
Re:ICBM==Earth-Earth Payload, not Earth-Space (Score:1)
In other words, it's not staying up there. A orbital test that will last for days, weeks, or months is scheduled for later in the year.
Re:There's a better way.. (Score:1)
Solar-sails (and maser sails) are very exciting because they are true interstellar drives, powered by photons that can be generated in stars or by lasers and masers.
Re:There's a better way.. (Score:1)
Maybe it doesn't.
Maybe it just dumps the "drive" at that point and coasts.
Oops (Score:1)
We ar going zhou launch zhee experiment. Da, push zhee red button, Vladimir. No! Njet zhat red button!
Common misconception (Score:1)
MM
More of a complementary technology.. (Score:2)
Just because you have a solar sail to propel you from location A to location B, doesn't mean you cannot also have some sort of fuel based thruster device to maneuver your vehicle at the local space-station dock or whatever.
Why bother? (Score:2)
While that's all well and good, I couldn't care less if a pseudo-me sees the wonders of the universe. I will still be stuck on this little ball with nothing to do but pust on Slashdot.
Seriously, I have the same ideological problem with the transporters on Star Trek. I cease to exist while my doppleganger continues to live my life, play with my kids, etc. I mean, I have nothing against potential digital clones of myself- I'm sure we'd get along well- but I would receive no benefit whatsoever from the donation of my neural patterns.
Solar Sails *can* tack. (Score:2)
Actually it can, sort of, since the sun's gravity acts in the opposite direction to the solar wind and your ship is going to be in orbit about the sun, by angling the sails appropriately you can move to a closer orbit, as well as a more distant one.
http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~diedrich/solarsail
If you are using an interstellar solar sails, possibly read "destination star" for "sun" at the far end - alternatively see
http://www.forwardunlimited.com/pdf/tp069.pdf "Roundtrip Interstellar Travel using Laser Pushed Lightsails" (yes, you can use an Earth based laser for the return journey, and you don't have to tack into it).
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Re:Small question... (Score:2)
Re:swords into plowshares, er, spacecraft (Score:2)
The first U. S. satellite was launched from a converted ICBM -- the Redstone booster.
Co-founded by Sagan (Score:2)
People always forget about those other two guys... kinda like Apollo 11. Everyone remembers Neil Armstrong, some people remember Buzz Aldrin (probably because he has a cool name), but who remembers Michael Collins?
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:2)
Your reply illuminates the presumption that anything unconquered is by definition "disorder". This is exactly what I'm talking about. "Discovery and learning" does not necessarily equal conquering and vice versa.
Generally the mindest of "Western civilization".
"fatalism:
1.The doctrine that all events are predetermined by fate and are therefore unalterable.
2.Acceptance of the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable."
Yup, things sort of suck when one's whole world-view revolves around the belief that humanity is an imperfect creation, that nothing really worthwhile in this world can be done, except to work hard and resignedly hope for a better afterlife. A subconscious drive for some abstract concept of "progress", coupled with an ultimate resignation, I think leads us to strive very hard without purpose, exploiting for immediate gain. What shall we "conquer" after space?
"I guess what I'm really asking is what do you have against Western thought?"
Besides the dogged persistence to always want to conquer some new thing for the holy grail of some undefined "progress", nothing really. But I'm sure I can always be assured of some knee jerks in the Slashdot crowd. (Sober introspection about our mad rush to develop and conquer? What you say?!)
Re:Better technologies out there (Score:2)
For better interplanetary missions, I read the really enjoyable Web between Worlds by Sheffield. He toys with the idea of space rotors (I think Forward wrote about these as well) which basically store ALOT of angular momentum. You jump on in the middle and lower your way out on a rotor. By the time you're at the end, you're up to speed and just let go when you are pointing in the right direction.
Both Velocity and acceleration at the tip are linear in radius, but Acceleration is quadratic in rotation while Velocity is linear, so by doubling arm length and reducing rotation speed by sqrt(2), you maintain a constant acceleration, but increase outgoing velocity by sqrt(2). Tensile requirements go up linerally by radius (it's longer, but acceleration is constant) so the material requirements are not too stringent.
The one caveat is that you have to catch as much as you throw or else inject energy into the rotor some other way.
Re:4$ million for.. what? (Score:2)
Kintanon
Alternate link. (Score:2)
Very cool story -- even though I won't move solar sails from my "Vaporware" until I actually see one in outer space...
This is a better technology. (Score:2)
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Knowledge is power
Power corrupts
Study hard
swords into plowshares, er, spacecraft (Score:2)
Turning swords into plowshares...boring. How about turning missles into spacecraft. Now that rocks.
And to think, this will be the first. I hope NASA gets off their ass if this works. Typical that something so experimental, hopeful, and daring had to come from private funding and not from NASA.
Physical Sails = Dead Tech (Score:2)
Never ceases to amaze me that people are insisting on physical sails for solar sailing, given that there are a slew of problems to contend with. Furthermore, the mission profile simply calls for a deployment test and minimal motion (no plans for a planetary or extrasolar mission).
Using an M2P2 (Mini-Magenospheric Plasma Propulsion) drive would be a much better choice, because in addition to the lack of launch mass (expensive!), you don't need to worry about deployment problems, and can then think about actually doing some science instead of a publicity stunt. More on M2P2 here [washington.edu] and here [newscientist.com].
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Yo soy El Fontosaurus Grande!
Re:Too obvious (Score:2)
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:2)
It wasn't necessary to prove anything beyond that. An object can't travel at a given speed without first accelerating to that speed (quantum mechanics aside; we're talking about spaceships here).
Re:tacking? (Score:2)
Inflatables (Score:2)
Still, I've often wondered why there aren't more space installations based on inflatable structures. You could build a collosal laboratory in space out of some sort of plastic sandwich (to make it self-healing from micrometeor hits). A structure larger than a football stadium could fit in the shuttle bay and inflated in orbit. You probably wouldn't want to live in one of them (radiation shielding), but you could certainly do materials science and agricultural experiments in one of them. Heck, you could make a giant inflatable wheel and spin it for "artificial gravity"
This is part of our destiny. (Score:2)
But there is another way. Instead of travelling faster, we just need to travel subjectively faster. I anticipate that in 20 years time we will have the technology to upload or mindfs into computers, and send digital proxies to the stars, using solar sail technology.
Of course, the travel time would be thousands of years, but subjectively speaking it would be instantaneous.
As Einstein irrefutably proved that travelling faster than the speed of light is utterly impossible, some sort of adjustment of our subjective timeframes is the only solution to interstellar travel.
When the singularity comes, as predicted by Vernor Vinge, I shall be among the first to upload. That way I shall be at an advantage, and may perhaps be able to ascend to the stars on light sail technology.
Speaking as a transhumanist, I must say that I consider it eminently possible, even probable, that these technologies will develop in the way I have outlined.
This is a happy day, Gentlemen.
You know exactly what to do-
Your kiss, your fingers on my thigh-
Re:Better technologies out there (Score:2)
As long as the alternative is to bring huge amounts of fuel and burn it over a short period, you will have a point where it for longer distances will be significantly cheaper to build a solar sail powered ship with a sail large enough to get you to your target in the same amount of time.
And keep in mind that nothing prevents you from for instance using a two stage system, where you do a short, intense burn using a normal engine first, and then deploy the solar sails afterwards to continue acceleration for the remainder of the trip.
Re:why an SLBM... (Score:2)
Re:Sad that Amercans are reduced to this ? (Score:2)
As far as using a Russian ICBM, I say go for it. ICBM technology can be well adapted to a low-orbital insertion, and it takes another weapon off the tally of the world. I'm not a pacifist typically, but really, if weapons technology can be put to non-weapons use, lets use it.. its already been tested and doesn't need an extensive engineering process to be feasible.
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I think I'll call this one Bob.
Live with Love for Love is Life. --mine.
A Clean Alternative (Score:2)
Although facinating to consider, it seems that a solar sail would be of limited use for a two way trip. A solar sail powered spacecraft can't tack against the 'wind' like a sail boat on the ocean is able to do. However, I find the lack of harmful byproducts to be an appealing advantage for solar sails.
Sailing was the most environmentally healthy way mankind ever developed to traverse large distances, and it seems appropriate that the same techniques be adapted to space travel. I am disturbed when I hear reports of engineers speculating on the construction of atomic weapon powered space craft, or such. We have already despoiled our own planet so utterly; we should keep space in its pristine purity.
This is precisely the sort of work that scientists and engineers should be engaged in. Rather than just asking what we can do, we should ask what we can do cleanly and well, without causing more of an impact to our environment than necessary.
- qpt
Re:Tiny bubbles... (Score:3)
Re:Better technologies out there (Score:3)
This is exactly what it's good for - the speed builds up extremely slowly (it only has the pressure of the solar wind driving it), and so the further you need to travel the more effective it is.
You need a more maneuvourable (sp?), or faster reacting, engine for that when it comes to landing, emergency procedures, etc.
You certainly do, but that's not what you would use a sail for. They're intended as a replacement for the long slow burn you need to get to your destination, so you don't need to carry a huge mass of fuel just to get there (instead you can save most of it for the final manoeuvres).
-dair
Small question... (Score:3)
Why is that particular point made? Because its Russian, or because it's an ICBM? Neither seem overly unusual to me. Russians have a good deal of expertise when it comes to space technology, arguably more so than the US. And using an ICBM kinda makes sense. I believe they've been bandying this idea around for quite a few years.
Re:Tiny bubbles... (Score:3)
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:3)
Oops, you have pushed my critique-of-western-thought button! What is it with "conquering" everything? We have to "conquer" the New World. We have to "conquer" nature. We have to "conquer" space.
"Einstein irrefutably proved that travelling faster than the speed of light is utterly impossible"
Well, it was a postulate that has been held up so far, but recent experiments throw inklings of doubt. Beware of absolutes. I don't think much in physics is "irrefutably proved".
"When the singularity comes, as predicted by Vernor Vinge, I shall be among the first to upload."
Yes, drink the kool aid...
It's unfortunate that the west is so fatalistic. I took a look into transhumanism and was at first intrigued, but then got disgusted with its arrogance, fatalism, and irresponsibility. I'm happy being just a plain ol' human. It's this urge to "conquer" to escape and be something else that leads us down all sorts of wrong paths in search of some mythical salvation. bleh
Re:A Clean Alternative (Score:3)
Sailing was the most environmentally healthy way mankind ever developed to traverse large distances
I beg to differ about sailing being environmentally clean.
The forests of North Carolina were decimated for masts and pitch to build English ships back in colonial times. The interior environment aboard ship was notoriously bad. The name "horse latitudes" comes from the fact that when ships were becalmed, they had to kill horses and dump them into the ocean. Not a pretty site.
True, oil tankers occasionally befoul beaches. OTOH, the US has more forest today than it did in the 1800s, and that's because we rely on oil and steel, not canvas and trees.
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:3)
Nobody has ever irrefutably proved that it is impossible to travel faster than c. That it is why it is called the theory of relativity, not the fact of relativity. In fact, I have recently seen articles about scientists accelerating (admittedly massless) particles faster than the speed of light. And the speed of light may actually have a higher limit, check out this article. [space.com] Hardly anything is ever proved, we just refine our theories by observation and hypothesis and we get closer and closer to the truth.
Enigma
Homer's response (Score:3)
Homer: So, they have solar sails powered by light now.
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Non-meta-modded "Overrated" mods are killing Slashdot
ICBM==Earth-Earth Payload, not Earth-Space (Score:3)
#1) It is a Russian weapon system.
#2) It uses a submarine as a launch platform. How many satellites get launched from submarines?? That is extremely unusual.
#3) An ICBM is not designed to loft a large-size payload. A set of MIRVs, while very heavy, is relatively compact.
#4) More to the point, an ICBM is not designed to deliver a payload to space. It is designed to deliver a payload to earth. Why do you think that Alan Shepard's flight lasted only 15 minutes? Because he was sitting on top of a Redstone ICBM.
So yes, it is overly unusual.
Tiny bubbles... (Score:3)
It says that the sail is only 30m in diameter. I was under the impression (from reading Omni magazine and Larry Niven, admittedly not the most reliable of sources) that one needed a sail of huge (kilometers) size to be able to get a noticeable boost from the solar sails. Also, the article says that they're using inflatable tubes to unfurl/stabilize the sail. IANAP (IANA Physicist) but wouldn't that make those inflatable tubes have to be tremendously strong to be able to survive in the low-pressure environs of space?
Those thoughts aside... It's pretty cool. And I wish I could launch my girlfriends cat out of a goshdarned ICBM tube.
Brant
I can see the exchange now... (Score:4)
Kremlin: Not a problem, comrad! Is just launch of solar-sail you may have been reading about on slashdot.
Norad: Okay... Umm... Our projected trajectory puts it landing in Washington, DC.
Kremlin: Is normal! It will separate at high altitude and booster will fire sail into space. Missile will fall harmlessly into Atlantic.
Norad: Okay... Umm... The ICBM appears to have landed in the capitol, exploded, and wiped out our entire government...
Kremlin: Is this a problem, comrad?
Norad: No, not really. Just commenting.
Wrong one! (Score:4)
(Jump forward 4 years, under the sea, in a Russian sub.)
Weapons Officer: Missile number five has been launched. That's one small step for man, one giant-
Captain: Gustov! You mean missile number nine, right?
Weapons Officer: Shazbot!
Re:This is part of our destiny. (Score:4)
Of course, if you wanted to send a signal faster than c, the group velocity of that EM field would have to exceed c, which it doesn't.
Since the speed of light, c, is determined by whatever the substance is that the EM field is propagating through by the equation
c = 1/sqrt(u*e)
Where u is the permeability of the substance and e is the permittivity. Each of these values is made up of two parts, the intrinsic value and the relative value. The intrinsic permeability of free space (u0) is 1.257e-6 H/m. The intrinsic permittivity of free space (e0) is 8.854e-12 F/m. In a vacuum the relative permeability and the relative permittivity are both 1. This gives a free-space value for c of 2.998e8 meters/sec.
In a non-vacuuum, either or both of the relative terms will be greater than 1, and the value of c in those mediums will be less than the free-space value.
The key to propagating signals faster than 3e8 m/sec is to find a material with a dielectric constant (relative permittivity) between zero and 1. These materials don't exist, however.
The Father of the Solar Sail.... (Score:4)
I was fortunate enough to be in Russia several years ago (as part of a NASA contract) and got to meet and work with Professor Vladimir Syromyatnikov, the father of the Solar Sail, who is one of the most gracious and intelligent men I have ever met. He is truly a brilliant mechanical engineer. His genderless docking collar design is a work of poetry in steel.
The good professor was kind enough to invite me up to his apartment one day to talk over lunch and meet his wife and family.
I often think about that afternoon and in particular, one corner of his living room where his television set was placed. There, atop the tv was a VCR and yup, you guessed it, the clock was blinking "12:00". To this day, whenever I need to assess my own failings, I just remind myself "Even Rocket Scientists can't do everything".
You can email the professor at:
vladimir.syromyatnikov@rsce.nasa.ru [mailto]
"A microprocessor... is a terrible thing to waste." --
Space.com (Score:4)
There's a better way.. (Score:5)
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Re:Small question... (Score:5)
First of all, the Russians do their land based launches from Baikonur, which is relatively far north. Normally, you'd prefer to do launches close to equator to get the maximal benefit of earth rotation. The Russians incur a lot of extra costs because of the position of Baikonur. (and this is also one of the reasons for the orbit MIR is in - they need to get it far enough north to be able to reach it cheaply from Baikonur). Launching from sea means they'll be able to launch from international waters and be independent of having their own land based launch areas near equator.
Second, there's strict international regulations on such launches, to prevent interference with aircraft. Which you should be happy about the next time you're flying anywhere... :) Launching from
sea simplifies things, because most traffic is
clustered around or between big cities, and the
further out at sea you go, the less flights will
pass through the area. So it reduces the administrational issues of ensuring no passenger
flights or other aircrafts pass right overhead
during the launch.
Environmental effects and other hazards are always an issue during rocket launches. The rocket can misfire, or explode. Parts may be hurtled through the area in the case of an accident. Dangerous materials or toxic gases may be released as a result of fire etc. Tons of things can go wrong. While it won't be good at sea either, at least you face less immediate threats to human life.
You also lessen the environmental impact of indigneous animals etc. (which has been a major concern with ESAs Ariane launch site in Central America).