Space Tugboat to Refuel Satellites 113
Faeton sent in this article about a proposed space tugboat to refuel aging satellites. Looks like they're just going to bolt on some extra thrusters with a new fuel supply, guidance system, etc.
"Pok pok pok, P'kok!" -- Superchicken
Darnit (Score:3, Funny)
Offtopic? Remember Mir? Try +1 Funny.... (Score:1, Troll)
Back about a year ago, Taco Bell offered to give free tacos for a day if the Mir space station (then decomissioned) hit a particular target (floating in the ocean... Pacific Ocean, I think, but maybe Indian Ocean) when it fell out of space.
The joke was that if they strap boosters onto satellites, then one would assume that no satellites will fall, thus there's no chance for free tacos in the future. Of course, this really doesn't affect satellites that are decomissioned for other reasons, like obsolescence, nor was the Mir a satellite. Regardless, though, it's funny, if a bit inaccurate. :-)
Re:Offtopic? Remember Mir? Try +1 Funny.... (Score:2)
Oh well, it's no use. Nobody will read this message.
Re:Offtopic? Remember Mir? Try +1 Funny.... (Score:1)
Well, I did. Sorry I don't moderate. Also feel sorry for the guy who "joked" and the people who went out of their way to explain the situation. Ah well, it's a thankless world.
Re:Darnit (Score:1)
"Jordan! Satellite on your right! Quick...oh well, too late."
That is a good idea. (Score:1)
Re:That is a good idea. (Score:1)
Re:That is a good idea. (Score:1)
Well, they wouldn't sit in one spot with a big catcher's mitt out, snagging the satellites as they pass by.
Satellites move fast, the tugboat would need to be moving at the same speed as the satellite.
And in the same direction
Re:That is a good idea. (Score:1)
Re:The plural of "satellite" is not "satellites" (Score:1)
Is it really a tugboat? (Score:4, Insightful)
A real tugboat would be very cool indeed -- something which could grab a satellite, move it up back into the correct orbit, and then let go and move on to the next satellite -- but it looks like this is rather less so.
Re:Is it really a tugboat? (Score:3, Interesting)
The SLES also can be used to rescue spacecraft that have been placed in a wrong orbit by their launch vehicles, or which have become stranded in an incorrect orbital location during positioning maneuvers.
They don't say anything about what happens after the SLES has moved the misplaced spacecraft. I suppose it would really depend on the needs of the rescued craft -- ie, whether it has enough on board fuel to maintain and adjust its attitude, or whether the SLES needs to hang around to help it.
As for a business model, well, how many satellites need rescuing? I would think that they're right to focus on the predictable market of sats that run out of juice instead of relying on error (human or mechanical) to create opportunities for them. At least, in the short-term. Once they've got their birds flying and have some real world experience, maybe they'll start getting creative with them and send them on "Extended Missions" once the sat-moving job is done.
Re:Is it really a tugboat? (Score:1)
Will they let Lance Bass be the captian
It's called a tether (Score:2)
Read about tethers here. [tethers.com]
Space elevators (Score:1)
Re:Space elevators (Score:1, Insightful)
The space elevator would have a bigger return on the investment though. If you told people that they could ride into space and spend a week in a orbital hotel for $10,000 - $20,000. It would earn money like crazy. Then you could launch satellites, probes, and repair missions from space. Or you could mine some asteroids or the Moon and easily transport material back to the surface. And the nuclear waste problem wouldn't be a problem if it got sent into a gas planet or out of the solar system.
Re:Space elevators (Score:1)
Fcuking great, let's pollute some other planets now that ours is totally messed up ours... the nuclear waste would still be a problem, just a problem in space.
Why not just send it to the Sun, that big bright nuclear exploding thing in the sky...? Pretty much the only safe place to put it, then we should stop using nuclear power and use only renewable energy... blah blah blah,
Laugh at the image... (Score:2, Funny)
I guess I'm just feeling nitpicky today. Other than that, this sounds like a great idea. Then again, I'm usually hyped about any space program. We've got less than 5 billion years or so to find a new home out there... :(
I'll nitpick too (Score:1, Informative)
Let B be the distance from the camera to the satellite.
The picture only gives you the ratio A/B, you can't "judge" the value of A alone.
Re:Laugh at the image... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Laugh at the image... (Score:1, Informative)
Actually less than 500 million years before the oceans vaporise. Still, I don't think you should worry that much, we probably have that technology 1000 years from now.
Re:Laugh at the image... (Score:3, Funny)
What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:2)
What am I missing? Do they need *sudden* changes of direction? We are not talking about spy satellites.
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:2)
But they can use electricity generated via solar panels. Granted, it might take some power away from other operations for a while, but that is better than abandoning the satellite altogether.
(* Anyway, ion drives are only really good for achieving high speeds over long distances (or time periods) not actually manuvering. *)
My understanding is that satellites "drift" from their target orbit over time due to minute calculation errors, atmospheric drag, etc. The drift is slow. Thus, a slow-acting ion engine should be sufficient in most cases.
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:4, Informative)
from http://www.orbitalrecovery.com/faq.html [orbitalrecovery.com]
Attitude control for the SLES and the telecommunications satellite to which it is mated is handled by ion thruster packs mounted on deployable booms. These booms are extended to provide sufficient thruster impulse for control of the SLES/telecom satellite combination.
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:4, Interesting)
As for wanting a "real tugboat" that attaches to multiple satelites... well the biggest problem is the docking, when we've had these working long enough to have confidence in automatic docking, then we can think about a general purpose tugboat. Remember it would have to dock with each satelite many times over a 10 year span, and transit between all the satelites it wants to service. Perhaps an ion based one could have a 25-30 year life span, but then you'd be testing two undertested technologies at once instead of just the docking. I'm not even sure they should be allowed to do this in geosynchronus orbit before it is tested in other less essential orbits; it's going to cost $$$ for the shuttle to go up there and clean up the mess when one of these fails.
Nevermind (Score:2)
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:4, Informative)
So if there really was a mess in GeoSynch they would just be screwed...
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:4, Funny)
Rubbish. I saw a documentary only last week where a suttle left the Earth's orbit and went thousands of miles out into space to land on an asteroid. They didn't have extra fuel tanks in teh cargo bay eitehr, cos it was full of these neat, large-wheeled, big trucks fitted with drills and machien guns and everything - they could even jump mile wide cnayons. You just ask the leader of the mission, Harry S. Stamper , a rough-neck, Texas oil man and his team of expert oil drillers if it ain't so!
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:1)
You didn't see it to the end, did you?
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:3, Funny)
These shuttles have capabilities that we don't know about - and they are as easy to drive as your car.
Re:What ever happened to ion drives? (Score:1)
No no! (Score:1)
Please let them * burn * and then launch new generation satellites build on nanotechnology - they will be small and efficient!
Old satellites never die... (Score:3, Interesting)
But the thing is... old satellites don't die. They just sit up there, cluttering up the orbital space. The GPS system, for example, expects to retire satellites at a regular rate into "parking orbits". In fact recently, as this article in Space Daily [spacedaily.com] shows, it was discovered that the parking orbits chosen will degrade and pose a threat to the operating GPS satellites in 20 to 40 years. This is a long-term problem that is only getting worse.
Refueling satellites at least gives us the control of them needed to take them out of orbit if required.
Anna B
Re:Old satellites never die... (Score:1, Informative)
You cannot just let them burn up in the atmosphere, because parts could survive re-entry, and cause major havok when they crash back to earth.
However, it *is* possible to capture a satellite which is in orbit, and bring it back to earth, but that is by no means a trivial operation, although if you don't care about damage to it, (you probably don't), it would be doable as a clean-up operation.
What should be done, but is very expensive, is to build the capability in to all new satellites to be landed when they are no longer required. That is the real way to solve the problem, however it is *very* expensive.
Re:Old satellites never die... (Score:2)
If they can do that... (Score:2)
Isn't all the money spent just getting there?
Re:If they can do that... (Score:1)
Do you have any idea how crowded it already is up there? Or how crowded it would become if they do that?
Re:If they can do that... (Score:2)
Currently there are less than 300 AFAIK. (Here's a list [satsig.net] of most of them). Please note that satellites which that are put put out of service usually will be parked in a "graveyard orbit" above the geostationary orbit - if there's still enough fuel and the motors still work of course.
The lower orbits (LEO, ~150-500km), where most military satellites, GPS, GLONASS, IRIDIUM and the like are placed is less problematic, since they are 'self cleaning' from old satellites: Objects there will deorbit sooner or later (the larger the sooner) since those orbits aren't very stable (due to earth's irregular shape) and the very thin atmosphere there reduces the orbital speed. That's why spacestations like Mir or ISS have to be boosted from time to time to higher orbits by a docked spacecraft.
The space debris problem is not caused by dead satellites, it's caused by all those tiny nuts and bolts left over from stage seperations, solar panel releases and so on which are affected much less by those deorbiting effects. Satellite and launch system designers nowadays take more care of this as they used in the 60-70s, e.g. the parts of the fairing which protects the payload of a launcher, are kept together connected by a wire or something after the fairing is ejected - the fairing just used to be blown up in seperate pieces by small pyros before.
Re:If they can do that... (Score:2)
Co-location of satellites to allow multiple satellites to be received by a single antenna is common in the TV broadcast business however each satellite requires a different set of uplink / downlink frequencies so there is a limit to the number of satellites that can be used in a particular position.
Re:If they can do that... (Score:1)
Since the 'newer, smaller, niftier' satellite replaces an old one this no problem.
Re:If they can do that... (Score:2)
Re:If they can do that... (Score:2)
Nevertheless, Orbital Recovery is upbeat about the prospects. It thinks it can save satellite operators money because the cost to launch a small tugboat would only be a fraction of a large, new satellite.
Reading the article gives you alot of information...
It doesn't refuel... (Score:1)
http://www.orbitalrecovery.com/faq.html
new machines built for space are few.. sad (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:new machines built for space are few.. sad (Score:1)
Personally I think we have plenty of problems down here that need to be addressed first.
Re:MOD (Score:1)
I wonder... (Score:3, Interesting)
The basic idea of the paper is that you could fund the development of these things by doing satellite maintenance and related things, then use one of them as the propulsion system for a trip to Mars orbit.
So I wonder if this is that project.
Refueling (Score:3, Funny)
Garbage collection (Score:4, Insightful)
getting rid of old satellites (Score:3, Insightful)
Any atronomists/physicists know what the gravitational pull of the earth is in orbit and how much force would be necessary to kick, say, a 2000 lb satellite to escape velocity?
Re:getting rid of old satellites (Score:1)
Getting it in an elliptical orbit with one part skimming the upper atmosphere would be good enough. It then only takes some patience to watch the satellite slowly getting into lower orbits and finally burn up (similar to aerobreaking at Mars, except for the final stage).
Re:getting rid of old satellites (Score:2)
Re:getting rid of old satellites (Score:2, Informative)
Most sats use solar but I suppose there may be a few with RTGs and maybe a handful with nuclear reactors. The RTGs are designed to survive reentry _intact_ so they don't spread radioactivity anywhere. I believe an RTG from a satellite launch accident in 1968 (Nimbus?) was actually recovered from the ocean and reused.
Now a nuclear reactor reentry might be more of a problem. I think the couple that are up there from the 60's are parked in orbits that won't decay for thousands of years.
Re:getting rid of old satellites (Score:2)
Mir, Spacelab, and thousands, or tens of thousands, of other satellites we put in low Earth orbit have burned up as their orbits degraded.
There is a big difference between LEO and GEO. There is no cutoff between where the Earth's atmosphere ends and the vacuum of space begins. Friction with the tenuous remaints of the atmosphere do cause the orbits of satellites at 100 km to degrade within years or decades. Friction at 36,000 will be a lot less. But even if it was as great, that disposal burnup would still be tens of millenium away.
If a geostationary satellite had enough fuel to change its orbit so it skims the atmosphere, so it burns up, it could use that fuel to remain in orbit for ages longer. When it is short of fuel, using the remaining fuel to kick it up just a touch would be plenty to keep it from being a danger to satellites that still had fuel.
orbital debris (Score:1)
-Guanno
Observation Satellites != Broadcast Satellites (Score:1)
Just a couple of points..
Weather satellites are mostly geosynchronous as they feed large area pictures regularly back. (EG METEOSAT Series) The importance in most weather models is the temporal resolution (how quickly you get updates) rather than the spatial resolution. As long as you can see the weather systems you're fine, so this is in the order of kilometres per pixel.
On the other hand Earth Observation satellites (ERS1/2, LANDSAT, SPOT) are in polar orbits because the 'surveying' and environmental monitoring tasks they are used for require a high spatial resolution to see smaller features, with pixels in the order of metres. The trade off is in temporal resolution as it could be many days before the craft repeats the same ground track. (Here SPOT has the advantage as it has steerable instruments)
The unusual platform is the NOAA series of satelittes - the AVHRR instrument on these has a resolution of ~1km, but it is a polar orbiter. Interestingly it broadcasts freely so if you have the kit and the software you get the images. Over here in the UK on a good pass we can see Alaska/New York. Interestingly this provides an image that is good for weather use (as there is a good pass from one of the craft every few hours)but the resolution can be usefully used for Earth Observation use as well (Guess what my thesis used...)
The limit on the lifespan of most observing craft, as opposed to broadcast craft, is the size of the coolant tank. Thermodynamic principles mean that when observing temperatures and in the IR (where there are good windows in the atmosphere absorbtion) the sensor must be colder than the object, otherwise you can't tell what part of the signal is from the object, and which is from the sensor itself. Most craft use liquid hydrogen filled dewars and the coolant runs out usually about 3-4 years after launch.
Fuel in polar orbitors is used to change orbits during the lifespan of the craft (may spend first year doing low level hi-res passes, then boost out in the next few years). At altitudes of 200-300km they also suffer from atmospheric drag and occasionally need to use a small boost to maintain orbit.
When the fuel in this sort of craft becomes below a certain margin, they are usually brought into the atmosphere in a controlled fashion.
Geosynchronous craft ( almost all broadcast craft and weather craft ) fly at an altitude of 38400km (from memory - don't shoot) where for all intents and purposes they maintain the same position over the Earths surface. However its not perfect and they wobble, so fuel is used to correct the orbit and stay within the 2 degree internationally allocated slot. Also if, like Astra, you have several in the same slot you need to stack them at different orbits, and that takes fuel because they are in non-ideal orbits, and you have to keep them all lined up for those fixed dishes!
When the fuel in this sort of craft runs below a certain value they are boosted clear and, being outside the geosynchronous 'event horizon' they drift clear and off into space. No-one wants a rogue fuel-less satellite in this sort of orbit, so internationally the various radio communication agencies are fairly hot on making sure you play by the rules.
In general terms I would expect polar orbiters to use more fuel due to the atmospheric drag. I'm not counting here the fuel used to deliver the craft to its orbit, which is clearly much higher in a geosynchronous craft.
The worst thing that can happen to a broadcast satellite is for its delivery engine/system to fail - then you have a very expensive satellite, probably destined for one of the precious geosynchronous slots, parked in a polar orbit. If you can get a secondary system to it, and control it on its manoevering engines/systems then you get a second chance.
The big problem with space debris is the stuff thats already there, most operational satellites now have thier disposal already planned.
A Role for the Space Station (Score:2)
It seems to me that there's a lot of hardware in orbit and that our modern complex society is dependent on this hardware. We also have a permanent space station up there (Alpha or ISS or whatever it's called). What say we use Alpha as a base for repairing and upgrading satellites as well as cleaning up orbital debris? What it would need is a space craft, kind of a tow truck in space. A couple of astronauts could take this tow truck to a satellite and reposition its orbit and make repairs. It would always be in space so it would be cheaper than having to send the shuttle up every time you want to repair a satellite. And it could find space junk and send it to burn in earth's atmosphere. This could be a real commercial role for Alpha. Combine this with tourism and Alpha might actually be a viable commercial entity.
Grabbing the hammer by the head... (Score:2)
The problem is the total cost of launching a satellite - most of which is the cost of boosting it into orbit. To correct that, you don't need tugboats or shuttles, you need cheap lift systems.
You need to make the cost of putting a bird up low enough that you can plan on a controlled deorbit at end-of-life. Right now, the bird's owner will squeeze every last second of use out of the bird because it is so damn expensive. So they won't plan to save the last N kilos of fuel to deorbit it - that fuel translates into another year of operation.
The problem of boosting a bird into orbit can be split into three parts: initial lift, orbital insertion, and orbital circularization.
For initial lift, you just need a rocket that gets about 90% of the work done. If it gets 85% done, or 95% done, you can correct that in the next phase. As a result you don't need a complicated first stage. What I suggest is a rocket made out of a renewable resource for the casing, coupled with a simple propellant.
That's right, I am suggesting a big Estes rocket. A rocket with a casing made of paper, and solid fuel. A rocket that can set on the shelf for months before use, rather than a liquid fuel rocket that requires constant maintainance before launch. A rocket that is cheap enough to throw away - remember that every kilo you add to the rocket to be able to reuse it is over ten kilos of fuel, or a kilo of payload GONE. I call this the BPR - Big Paper Rocket concept.
For the second part, orbital insertion, you need a rocket that is controllable so you can make up the last 5-15% of the boost. Again, use a cheap system - solid fuel, liquid oxidizer. You throttle the rocket by controlling the oxidizer feed, but the fuel is solid. This has many of the advantages of the BPR - longer shelf life, simpler to make.
The last part, orbital circularization, requires a light motor - it's staying up with the bird, so we need to shave kilos. This is where a high specific impulse system like ion drive or liquid fuel is worth its mass in gold, quite literally.
Make the system cheap enough that you can launch a bird for less than a couple of million dollars, and the owners will not have a problem with deorbiting a bird before it is completely dry.
This way, you avoid having old birds with less than state-of-the-art systems cluttering the sky, taking places that a new craft could do twice the work in. This way, you avoid complex docking manuevers. This way, you bring the cost of getting stuff into space down where it is USEFUL to have a space station. This way you pave the way for Moon and beyond.
OK, that's my opinion. Pick it apart. Or, if you think I'm on to something, start beating on the Planetary Society, the National Space Society, vulture capitalists, NASA, and your congressmutants to make it happen.
Someone missed their market research (Score:3, Interesting)
These things probably only have two useful applicaitons, orbital repair (not repair in orbit, but of the orbit), and de orbiting something to salvage the GEO slot. Not to say that the technology isn't great on its own merits.
Slowing down (Score:2)
Sounds similar to Orbital Express (Score:3, Informative)
Old Concept (Score:3, Interesting)
Does anyone know if Challenger had an impact on why it's taken so long to return to this, or was this one of those "oh YEAH, we promised this to Congress back in 1978" deals?
But their open source (Score:1)
However, it is cool that they are running open source software for their presence. I wonder if the on-board computers are running Linux or *BSD
In hindsight -- add external power plugs (Score:2)
Okay. Hindsight is 20-20. But clearly future satellites should have the facility to get electricity from an external source.