European Moon Mission Ready for Launch 357
merryprankster writes "Europe's first mission to the Moon is set for blast off from Kourou in French Guiana just after midnight, local time, on Sunday. SMART
1 will study the composition of lunar rock through X-ray observations. The probe uses a new solar electric propulsion system which converts solar energy its panels into motion via the expulsion of ions. Details at the ESA mission site."
The means of getting there is the best part (Score:5, Funny)
The probe uses a new solar electric propulsion system which converts solar energy its panels into motion via the expulsion of ions.
IMHO that is much more interesting than the mission itself. The less chemical fuel needed to get moving once in space could mean more room for payload.
Beat the weenies to the punch:
I, for one, welcome our new ion propelled masters!
Imagine a beowulf cluster of these!
Natalie Portman could fly one of these to my house anytime!
The lengths people will go to to hurt the ego of chemical-rocket engineers!
Chemical rockets, 70, found dead in their suburban home, truly an American icon.
Obligatory goatse.cx [goatse.cx] link.
Re:The means of getting there is the best part (Score:5, Funny)
Excellent observation from you, this is a new cutting edge propulsion technique, I have been studying this for the last year, I ran across this site [jlnlabs.org]which hosts amateur experiments in this phenomena, the made a crude working anti-gravity device, so far there is no solid physical explanation to why it flies, some have theorized that it is ion wind, I was surprised that NASA patented this propulsion technique, I'm too lazy to dig up the link now.
Re:The means of getting there is the best part (Score:3, Informative)
There's a perfectly solid explanation --- it is electric wind.
Re:The means of getting there is the best part (Score:2)
Re:The means of getting there is the best part (Score:4, Interesting)
It's all about the technology. And a couple of extra satellites to justify the cost of launching the Ariane of course
Re:The means of getting there is the best part (Score:2)
ahhh. you get the idea.
Re:The means of getting there is the best part (Score:2, Informative)
Fucking crackwhore (Score:2, Insightful)
moderators.
Why do you mod a picture like that funny? You sick perverted bastards almost made me empty my stomach on the keyboard.
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:2)
I bet there are a lot of plutonium-rich asteroids out in space too...
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:2)
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:2)
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:3, Interesting)
Remember, heavy elements are made in supernovae, and elements heavier than Uranium have too short a half life to have lasted long enough to be around. Uranium is only around because it's got an enormously long half life. Radioactive elements lighter than Uranium with short half lives are found in nature only because they decayed from heavier elements with longer half lives. So no, there's no plutonium out there.
Re:Don't let W. find out (Score:2)
Uranium, Plutonium? In space? Sounds like WMD! INVADE!!!
DOn't worry nothing can go wrong. rememebr it's made French Tough so there's nothing to worry about.
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:2)
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:2)
What's the worst that could happen? [imdb.com]
Re:Safe to the environment also the best part (Score:2)
They don't need RTG's because of solar proximity. (Score:3, Informative)
So it was the French... (Score:2, Funny)
e.g. "On its long trek through space the cube-shaped probe..."
Re:Ughh why not just have... (Score:2)
According to this [adelaide.edu.au]:
1807 - British Abolition Act bans any British participation in slave trade
1808 - US abolishes slave trade
1818 - France outlaws slave trade
1833 - Britain emancipates slaves
1848 - France emancipates slaves in colonies
1865 - 13th Amendment to US constitution abolishes slavery
Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hopefully they can perfect the ion drive, however through this to increase the speed and payload capacity. Then we might have something really cool... (until the anti-matter reactor comes online...)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Spending the same amount of cash, the little put-put ion engine would get you there considerably faster.
In addition, since the ion engine can be reused (say, to return), and that X amount of fuel can't, I think it's a lot more economical..
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
On earth, things are cheap. When you have to get them into space, that makes mass expensive. Light is good.
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. Really. quoth the article: "Ion propulsion systems are less powerful than conventional chemical rockets..."
Power = Energy/Time = Mass * dV^2
If average power is less, velocity increases at a slower rate. Therefore, the probe will take longer to get to a specific destination than a conventional rocket. MUCH longer.
It may be slightly more economical..." just slightly? considering that the available fuel is practically infinite with no fuel from earth being used (except for leaving earth)
Again, quoth the article: "...but can run for ten times as long using the same mass of propellant."
So even the ion drives have a finite amount of "fuel" which must be loaded before liftoff. So much for that.
Combine these two, and you have an engine that is very poorly suited for transporting humans.
It is, however, very well suited for probes and the like, since the engine is smaller and lighter than chemical booster. That can decrease cost of lift and size of craft by a good margin... and since most probes don't starve to death you can afford to take 15 months to get there.
The moral of this story is, ion drives as they currently stand are not the end-all solution for space transportation. I agree it's well suited for this particular use, though.
=Smidge=
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:4, Informative)
If average power is less, velocity increases at a slower rate. Therefore, the probe will take longer to get to a specific destination than a conventional rocket. MUCH longer.
You forgot about time. Your chemical engine accelerates your spacecraft at 10 m/s^2 for ten minutes, and then runs out of fuel and has to coast the rest of the way. Total delta-V: 6 km/s. Your ion drive accelerates at 0.1 m/s^2 for a year. Total delta-V: 50 km/s. At the end of the year, the ion drive vehicle is going a hell of a lot faster.
And in case you think that a year of continuous thrust is infeasible, Deep Space I's ion drive ran (on and off) for about 600 days.
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2, Informative)
This appears to be a demonstration project, with the final application in extended range projects (where traditional chemical fuel rockets would have to carry too much f
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, they should add another one to the ship. Twin Ion Engine craft are pretty speedy, and highly manueverable as well.
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:5, Informative)
The payload in the Apollo program was launched from a Saturn V, which can put nearly 120,000 kg in low orbit and so had enough oomph to put it's payload immediately into a lunar trajectory. The payload for this mission will be launched from an Ariane V, which can only put ~16,000 kg in low orbit, but at (IIRC) a tenth the price.
Hopefully they can perfect the ion drive, however through this to increase the speed and payload capacity.
The drive itself is pretty near perfect; the problem is that if you're going to kick out exhaust at such insane velocity that you don't need a whole lot reaction mass to get good deltaV, then you need a whole lot of energy to get good deltaV instead. And these guys are getting that energy from solar panels, which takes a while. If we had that anti-matter reactor you want (or cold fusion, or anything else providing lots of energy from little mass) we might eventually want something fancy like VASIMR [nasa.gov], but in the short run we'd probably just plug the reactor in to bigger or more ion drives.
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, Ion propulsion is faster. It just has much less tork, if I may use the analogy.
Unlike rocket propulsion, Ion propulsion has a constant push. Although is exerts a smaller force, it can accelerate for as long as there is fuel, and it uses very little of it.
That's how they'll be able to send people on mars in a matter of months (last figures I had was 9 months) instead of more than a year (it was reported to be somewhere around 16-18 months using rocket propulsion).
For a moon mission, though, speed isn't necessarily important, so they can afford the longer trip time to same money and augment the payload (instead of carrying all that fuel).
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Aerobraking (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe so, but it's nothing required to the amount of Tork [petertork.com] required to drive the last train to Clarksville.
Just give it time (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:3)
It's a lot more economical. It means that they can launch a vehicle on top of a commerical GEO booster, and that the vehicle can make its own way out of geos
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Re:Ion drive is cool, but... (Score:2)
Why rush? The moon isn't going anywhere (Score:2)
Besides, it gives the joint Alien-American-Russian crew at Moon's dark side base enough time to cover up everything and go for well-deserved vacation in Phobos.
Um.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Wouldnt solar powered ion engine be easier to say?
Yes, but... (Score:5, Informative)
They could have saved a ton of money by.... (Score:2)
Re:They could have saved a ton of money by.... (Score:4, Informative)
From yesterday's article [bbc.co.uk] article about Smart 1 at the BBC:
Re:They could have saved a ton of money by.... (Score:2)
hmmmm....me thinks they are looking further than science here....exploration maybe? Will the European nations be the first to mine the moon?
Re:They could have saved a ton of money by.... (Score:4, Insightful)
No - we've all ratified the Ottowa Convention.
Finally we'll know (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry, you can't win. (Score:2)
Sorry, but your telescope is a hoax too. It's really just a poster-mailing tube with plastic wrap over both ends.
Would you like moon-fries with that? (Score:2)
No hoax, but they'll find that the moon has since been colonized by the McDonalds/Starbucks joint project which reached the moon in 99 and have set up a variety of lunar franchises for mystery-meat and moccachino craving space-travellers.
367kg isn't that light, really (Score:5, Interesting)
The article mentions that it is lightweight, only 367kg but NASA's first lunar orbiter weighted 386kg [astronautix.com]. So 40 years later we have a 19kg savings and it takes 15 months to get there. I love progress...
Re:367kg isn't that light, really (Score:2)
Re:367kg isn't that light, really (Score:2)
From the webpage I linked:
This wasn't an apollo craft, this was Lunar Orbiter 1. No people. Not sent up by a Saturn V, an Atlas-Agena D. No landing on the moon or re-lift off. Just an Orbiter almost fo
Re:367kg isn't that light, really (Score:2)
Solar wind on panels vs ion engine thrusting power (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe, if they did half-turns of the solar panels on every orbit they could elongate the orbit enough to break free or perhaps make Earth one of the axis points. ???
Re:Solar wind on panels vs ion engine thrusting po (Score:2)
ION engines not really valid for short missions. (Score:5, Insightful)
If its passed off a as a proof of concept it would make more sense but the article doesn't imply that.
Considering the limited distance it would probably been more efficient to use an established propulsion system and get the scientific results sooner. Now, because of their choice any findings are unnecessarily delayed.
On a high note, its good to see they are not replicating the work done by the previous NASA probe - seems scienctists are much better at getting along than their governments.
Re:ION engines not really valid for short missions (Score:4, Informative)
Re:ION engines not really valid for short missions (Score:2, Funny)
Unfortunately, however, our solar system contains only one star, meaning that solar powered engines lacked redundancy...
(YES, that's a JOKE...)
Re:ION engines not really valid for short missions (Score:2)
-Carolyn
Giant Trebuchet (Score:2, Funny)
The engine isn't new, it's the way it's used is (Score:5, Informative)
Solar electric propulsion is hardly new. It's been used for getting communications satellites out to their final geosynchronous orbits for a number of years now, and NASA demonstrated using solar-powered ion engines for interplanetary primary propulsion on Deep Space 1 [nasa.gov] back in '98.
What ESA is claiming is new about this mission is that they'll be combining ion propulsion with gravity assist maneuvers. AFAIK that hasn't really been done yet (although I know some guys at JPL who're working on it), and given how difficult it can be to work out low-thrust trajectories in the first place I would imagine that successfully throwing gravity assists into the mix would be a significant acheivement.
A bit on ion propulsion (Score:5, Interesting)
The figure of merit for rocket propulsion is specific impulse (Isp). It is a measure of unit thrust per unit mass of fuel consumed per unit time. Conventional (chemical) propulsion, such as solid rocket boosters, have an Isp in the 200 - 300 range. But they generate many many thousands of kilonewtons of thrust. That's why we use them for launching things out of gravity wells.
Ion engines, on the other hand, have Isps from 2000 - 3500 (though the higher end of that range is only test-stand stuff right now). They, however, produce only millinewtons of thrust, and cannot be used for fast orbit transfers or launches. But they can be made small. Very, very small, with correspondingly small amounts of fuel, which is pure joy for aerospace engineers trying to design robotic missions.
Unfortunately, they are also power-hungry little buggers. A single ion engine can use a kilowatt of power while running...and they must be running all the time to generate enough delta-v to have an effect on the course of a spacecraft. (Delta-v is the measurement of how much of a change in a velocity vector is necessary to effect the desired change in course, and mission designers begrudge every cm/s...every maneuver burns propellant, and there are no gas stations in space.) There are only two ways to get power in space right now: solar cells, and some form of nuclear decay. Only solar cells have a good enough power/mass ratio to run ion engines, and as missions proceed farther out from the Sun, array area must be bigger, which adds mass. It's a tricky balancing act.
For this mission, however, the craft will always be close enough to the sun to generate the power it needs fairly easily. (Except when it's in shadow, but that's why we have storage batteries.)
Ion propulsion is an old technology, incidentally. It's been around in some form or another since the 60's. It's only recently that it became economical, though.
I could go on for pages, but I'm unconvinced anyone wants to see that.
-Carolyn
Watch out Mars! (Score:2)
Debunk the Debunkers (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't know what good it'd do, since the conspiracy theorists would simply say something about the pictures being covertly doctored by the French government after the the probe landed in order that they might get back in bed with the U.S Government..
They'd get more Fox News airtime, but at least we'd have a few converts.
All been done before (Score:5, Informative)
What exactly is innovative about this mission? It is the same mission as flown by Clementine years ago. Solar electric propulsion is commonplace. Here are some spacecraft that have flow them to date:
I don't think this story is slashdot worthy.
Europe's FX industry coming of age (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:3, Funny)
Because NASA's wheel is square.
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:2)
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because otherwise things like this [slashdot.org] will happen. Competition is always healthy and there's no point leaving NASA with the monopoly on space travel.
What's so bad about offering another perspective toward the whole of the universe?
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:3, Insightful)
To use your symbolism, instead of building a wheel they are building a sledge - having discovered through wheel-driven exploration Space is covered in snow and bumpy so a sledge is a good option. Yes, the wheel works
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:5, Insightful)
More players means more ways of doing things. Cooperation can be good -- but so can competition. Competition allows various new technologies and ideas to be tried. A cooperative monopoly can strangle a field.
Possibly the biggest problem with NASA is that it has stifled innovation in the field. When one organization dominates a field the way NASA does, it's difficult to get alternative ways of doing things developed. The dominant group dismisses out of hand any thing they haven't developed. They tend to drive off independently minded people. Problems go unnoticed for longer periods of time.
Many of us welcome competition for NASA -- be it private or governmental. I salute ESA for it's independence -- and for trying out ion propulsion.
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:2)
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why makes oneself reliant on NASA wheels, when one could have a home grown wheel industry with all the spinoff products that it generates.
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why so nationalistic? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wow, are they double checking the results ? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Wow, are they double checking the results ? (Score:2)
It is true that ion drives are not that exciting in terms of time for a moon mission - although it does reduce weight. An ion drive to the outer solar system could reduce payload and travel time too, because the drive can fire almost continuously..
Re:Offtopic, but I need help! (Score:2)
Re:Offtopic, but I need help! (Score:2)
Re:We don't mind (Score:2)
Also, how many planets and other floating hunks of space stuff were we the first to get to?
Re:We don't mind (Score:2)
Re:Article text (Score:2)
Haha! So my cheese theory has not been disproven!
Ion engines aren't exactly new (Score:2)
Re:Ion engine (Score:2, Informative)
Around the same time, HRL demonstrated the first laser [hrl.com]. Busy people.
Re:finally (Score:2)
Re:Tie Figher (Score:2)
Re:Tie Figher (Score:2)
Sure, on Slashdot you may see a lot of I Am Not A Lawyer posts full of misguided legal "advice", but if you need an expert on the fictional details of the fictional physics of fictional military craft, you can be sure you'll see a post!
And people say Slashdot comme
Re:Boy, will they be disappointed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Take note (Score:2)
Re:SUCK IT FRANCE! (Score:2)
In space, no-one can hear you mime.
Re:Mimes (Score:2)
Re:Prediction: Mysterious Failure (Score:2)
Not Mysterious...Ariane 5 (Score:2)