NASA Ground Tests Ion Engine 54
herda05 writes "New Scientist reports from a press release by NASA on a successful ground test of the HiPEP (High Power Electric Propulsion) ion engine, which is the first 'major milestone' for Project Prometheus. Also some pictures and more info on the HiPEP engine."
Wow... (Score:2, Redundant)
Next step the "grape drive" .... (Score:1)
Xenon gas? (Score:2, Informative)
Is there really a lot of xenon gas in outer space? Wouldn't ionizing hydrogent work a lot better? And, is it really a vacuum chamber if it's filled with xenon gas?
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:3, Informative)
harvesting type of engines/probes are still quite far off afaik so it hardly matters.
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:3, Informative)
A couple of implications can be drawn here:
- There is nothing but xenon inside the chamber.
- There isn't enough xenon in the chamber to generate significant pressure.
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:2)
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:5, Informative)
Close, but...
The speed isn't a constant for different gasses. What's important, as you point out is momentum.
Change of momentum = impulse = Force * time.
The advantage of heavier ions is that they accelerate slower, thus staying within the engine for longer. As a result, the force is applied to the ions for longer, therefore the change in momentum of the ions is higher, therefore, the change in momentum of the vehicle is also higher.
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:3, Funny)
Oh great! There goes the price of Pepto-Bismol [pepto-bismol.com]. (Yes, it contains the metal Bismuth [pepto-bismol.com]).
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:1)
Oh the irony...
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:1)
Yes, I'm bitter.
Re:Xenon gas? (Score:2)
Now all I need... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Now all I need... (Score:1)
And therein lies the problem (Score:3, Informative)
Yep. And considering current "MMRG" units and SRGs(check out their homepage- they're basically two of I-dunno-how-many nuclear-powered generators NASA has at the moment) top out at 100W per module, well...
I think the problem is that NASA, rightly so, is extremely nervous about putting nuclear stuff into orbit, because of the frequency with which these things blow up. So it tends to be very simple, not very efficient(the MMRG only captures 100 out of 250
Re:And therein lies the problem (Score:2, Informative)
And it has a power of only 1kW. IMHO such powerfull engines make most sense at solar swingby manouvers where you've a lot of light energy avaliable.
On earth it's the best to burn the whole fuel in a very short time(*) but in ze
Re:And therein lies the problem (Score:3, Informative)
Re:And therein lies the problem (Score:1)
Obligatory TIE Fighter comment (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Help! parsing the title! (Score:2)
Re:Help! parsing the title! (Score:3, Informative)
"NASA Ground-tested an Ion Engine" would have been a less headline-ish way of saying it.
Re:Help! parsing the title! (Score:2)
Re:Help! parsing the title! (Score:2)
Re:Help! parsing the title! (Score:2)
Now the work cluster f*ck is not hyphenated because it is a compound noun: while f*ck is normally a verb, it is used here as a
Re:Help! parsing the title! (Score:1)
Psychology is a science, of course.. but it doesn't matter. The APA rules are evil.
Xenon tends to explode less often... (Score:1)
Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:2)
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:5, Informative)
This I think makes it only usefull for long flights. No tie fighters. Fortuanly real space flight has a lot of long flights.
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:2, Insightful)
That's a good point.
Space is massivly huge. Nothing like Star Treck of Star Wars ever illustrated very well.
Years and years and years of vast nothing.
A slow burn over days or weeks would build a pretty good speed though.
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:2)
Try millenia ** millenia ** millenia of vast nothing
A slow burn over a couple of years would be better
Spy Magazine take on Star Trek (Score:2)
One of my big disappointments with the name "Trek" was my initial belief that it would be a trek, that the ship would require long times to reach interesting destinations after the fashion of old West wagon trains, but with the warp drive zooming around to encounter aliens at every corner was kind of a cheat.
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:5, Informative)
Rockets in space work by taking some mass and throwing it in the opposite direction you want to go. Imagine yourself floating in space holding a bowling ball. You wouldn't have to push the ball away from you very hard to get yourself moving, since it's very heavy. But what if you only had a ping-pong ball: to get yourself moving quickly, you'd have to "throw" the ping-pong ball away from you very very very fast, to make up for its very small mass.
Chemical rockets take some combination of chemicals that react strongly together, creating heat. The result is a hot gas at high pressure, which blows out in the direction of the rocket nozzle, providing thrust the other direction.
The xenon ion engine takes xenon gas at very very low pressure, ionizes the atoms so that they're electrically charged, and then uses electric force to fling them at VERY high speed out into space. The velocity is much higher than in any chemical rocket. But ion engines aren't very strong -- the process works with just a little tiny bit of xenon at a time, so the engine as a whole winds up giving just a very gentle push. But since not much xenon is used up, the xenon that you have will last a LONG time.
That's the "specific impluse": a measure of how much a rocket can push you "per pound" of fuel. This page [spaceflightnow.com] says that the space shuttle's chemical engines have a specific impulse of 460. This latest ion engine has a specific impulse of 6000!
So with the same weight of fuel, the ion engine would get you going about 13 times faster by the time you used up the fuel.
- Peter
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:2)
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:2)
Re:Am I interpreting this correctly? (Score:1)
Very very very low thrust (Score:4, Informative)
Slow and steady wins the race.
Re:Very very very low thrust (Score:3, Informative)
The real impressive engine... (Score:4, Informative)
Anyway, this nuclear propulsion is somewhat related to the newer Xenon method albeit with lower specific impulse but much higher acceleration.
Re:The real impressive engine... (Score:2)
Re:The real impressive engine... (Score:2)
If the best TTW ratio they could get was 3:4, that's not very impressive as they would then need an airframe and an atmosphere to provide effective lift, and this is just the engine we're talking about here...
Re:The real impressive engine... (Score:2)
Cool. (Score:5, Funny)
Those were the days.
So..... (Score:2, Interesting)
Xenon happens to be a fission product... (Score:1)
Nuclear power in space (Score:3, Insightful)
What they really should be doing is coupling ion engines to nuclear reactors. Then you'd have a power plant capable of producing a large quantity of energy for a long time, and keep going for many, many years.
I remember reading somewhere that nuclear-powered ships could keep going and going for 20+ years or more. The only reason why such nuclear aircraft carriers eventually must return to port is other supplies like food and water for the crew, not fuel. Same thing goes for ballistic missile submarines, which can stay submerged for years on end, using the power from the nuclear reactor to produce drinkable water and breathable air for the crew. A typical deterrence patrol for an Ohio class SSBN only lasts for two months only because that's probably how long a crew can stay cooped up in a very small space without going crazy. :)
Only thing is there are all these groups that seem to be afraid to put anything nuclear in space for some reason. If anyone's still really serious about doing manned space exploration, we'll have to do this eventually, I think. Solar just won't be able to produce the kind of power required to provide extended life support and reasonably fast travel at the same time. It's no good to be cooped up in a space capsule for eight months to get to Mars, and back again... These ion engines could probably produce a lot more thrust with the kind of juice a nuclear reactor onboard could put out, possibly even enough to accelerate the ions to relativistic velocities, and then we could have some real serious speed, to make interstellar travel, at least by machines, a realistic possibility.
As for radiation shielding, that's something you'll have to deal with anyway, nuclear reactor or not. Even a small coronal mass ejection could produce far, far more radiation than the power plant would.
Re:Nuclear power in space (Score:2)