Fuel Free Spacecrafts Using Graphene 265
William Robinson writes: While using a laser to cut a sponge made of crumpled sheets of Graphene oxide, researchers accidentally discovered that it can turn light into motion. As the laser cut into the material, it mysteriously propelled forward. Baffled, researchers investigated further. The Graphene material was put in a vacuum and again shot with a laser. Incredibly, the laser still pushed the sponge forward, and by as much as 40 centimeters. Researchers even got the Graphene to move by focusing ordinary sunlight on it with a lens. Though scientists are not sure why this happens, they are excited with new possibilities such as light propelled spacecraft that does not need fuel.
Can't be fuel-free forever (Score:4, Interesting)
So they'd need to carry hydrogen and split off its electrons or something to neutralize the charge.
Even More Thrust (Score:3, Interesting)
So they'd need to carry hydrogen and split off its electrons or something to neutralize the charge.
Actually this could provide more thrust. Use sunlight to propel the craft until it has built up a large enough electric charge that the efficiency of the thrust begins to drop (since it will take an increasing amount of energy to expel the electrons from something with a large positive charge) and then introduce a stream of neutral gas into the sponge. This should strip the electrons off the gas and the remaining positively charge ions will then be repelled by the positive graphite and provide even more th
Re:Even More Thrust (Score:4, Interesting)
Existing ion thrusters already use ionized Xenon for propulsion, so it's definitely a possibility (charge the graphene using this technique, ionize the Xenon and use that to neutralize the graphene, use the Xenon as ion thruster fuel). However, electrons are very nearly massless, so unless they're somehow exciting them with massive amounts of energy, the propulsion from the electrons is unlikely to be significant.
Re:Even More Thrust (Score:4, Insightful)
The key point with ion drives is they don't eject charged particles. They strip the electrons from Xe, accelerate it towards a grid anode (essentially this is a lot like a CRT) and then the electrons hook back up with the Xe ions on the way out, neutralizing them. So you end up with a high speed stream of neutral atoms, not ions. The spacecraft never develops an overall charge.
And lest anyone be fooled, electric charges are VERY powerful, you would generate a negligible amount of delta V before your spacecraft's propulsion system completely stopped working. Nor does any fancy juggling act change that, if you lose negative charges you've got a huge problem.
Depends on Comparison (Score:3)
However, electrons are very nearly massless, so unless they're somehow exciting them with massive amounts of energy, the propulsion from the electrons is unlikely to be significant.
It depends on what you compare it to. Since this process was hitting the graphite with photons it makes sense to compare the thrust produced to that created purely by bouncing photons off a material. Electrons might be light but they have more mass than a photon and so the thrust should be significantly higher.
Re:Even More Thrust (Score:5, Informative)
Not any ordinary Xenon, but 136Xe.
In the various Ion Engines designed, built, and occasionally functioning, 136 Xe is the propulsive gas of choice, and pretty much all of the (Unclassified) Literature on the Subject refer only to it.
Under Plasma conditions, Xenon is anything but inert, and there is at least one (Relatively) stable 136xe-3He compound that is only chemically stable when Ionized.
This is also true with certain Helium Hydrides, but for Propulsion purposes, one needs as much Nuclear Mass that is easily Ionized to High Charge States as possible.
They wouldn't let us play with Radon.
Re:Even More Thrust (Score:4, Informative)
Of course this means that you need to have a fuel source but it's likely to be far more efficient than current rocket fuel plus there it no need for it to be something explosive like hydrogen
I'm assuming we're referring to space propulsion not launch since the former requires very high thrustand so the efficient techniques don't generally work. Given that, Hydrogen isn't explosive: it requires oxygen for that and there's none of that in space. A tank full of liquid hydrogen in space is pretty inert as these things go.
It's the midi-chlorians! (Score:2)
What they don't say, is that the graphene sponge was used by Qui-Gon to clean up Anankin's wound. And since the midi-chlorians hate lasers (or light-sabers, for that matter) cutting through them, they preferred to move the sponge away.
Mystery solved. You heard it here first.
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So they'd need to carry hydrogen and split off its electrons or something to neutralize the charge.
Or they could just periodically zap the crap out of nearby objects with all their pent-up charge. It would probably temporarily stop the ship, but every design has its flaws. If we could dig up the Yamamoto and stick one of these engine/gun thingys in it, this could really help save the human race from those pesky Gamelons [wikipedia.org]
Or Superoxide? (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S... [wikipedia.org]
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Power sources do not produce electrons. They simply pump electrons around in a circuit. After running this propulsion system for a while you'd need to replenish your electrons from some external source (or eject positive ions to compensate).
> If it is producing enough electrons to move the material it might be possible to harvest those electrons and create a much more efficient solar power array.
Look up 'thermionic converter'. It's already been suggested for use in combination with solar collectors and n
Explanation seems to violate charge conservation.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Where the heck those extra electrons came from? Absorbing photon momentum (more efficient solar sail) sounds feasible, but "accumulating electrons" from nowhere and then emitting them in one direction (where light came from) ... less so.
Paul B.
Re:Explanation seems to violate charge conservatio (Score:5, Funny)
Lets test your hypothesis by creating a slashdot poll.
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Where the heck those extra electrons came from?..."accumulating electrons" from nowhere and then emitting them in one direction...
Isn't that the opposite of what the phosphors used in a CRT do when hit by electrons? Is it too much to think the reverse is possible?
Re:Explanation seems to violate charge conservatio (Score:5, Informative)
Well, CRT face is (weakly) grounded, so e- kinetic energy can excite atom for subsequent photon emission, but its charge will happily leak into the ground.
There is no "ground" anywhere next to flying spacecraft!
Actually, on reading the preprint, yes, electrons come from under the Fermi level, get lost in the process and graphene foam (or, spacecraft carrying it) *will* become charged -- it was pointed out in the article as well, but I did miss it on quick read.
AC below actually paints a rather dramatic picture of what can happen next! :)
Paul B.
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Yeah i read that bit too and i get it now... however doesn't that mean the effect also diminishes as the charge builds? eventually completely stopping.
Sounds like it basically need a battery, i wonder if that could be solved by coupling this with a photovoltaic material? Sorry my solid state physics kinda sucks :P
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No, the electrons go through a circuit, which is the entire point.
In a CRT, the output of the flyback transformer is a really high voltage, which connects to the CRT face through a heavily insulated plug. If you take a look at any CRT, there's a thick heavy cable in the middle of the body that runs to the flyback transformer. Inside the CRT, the electron gun is at negative po
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Clearly it collects the electrons from the hydrogen particles in the interstellar gas. Of course, the now-charged hydrogen gas follows it around until it gains critical mass and... FOOM! New sun!
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Maybe from this other recently discovered process?
http://cleantechnica.com/2013/... [cleantechnica.com]
No Charge Violation! (Score:3)
In lab = Surrounded by Electrons (Score:2)
Where the heck those extra electrons came from?
They could easily come from all the material which is surrounding the graphite. As the charge builds up on the graphite due to all the electrons being expelled it will develop an increasingly strong electric field eventually will pull electrons from the walls of the chamber. Since the vacuum will also not be perfect the remaining gas molecules could also transfer charge by moving back and forth between the graphite and the chamber walls.
A similar effect exists in the LHC where the electrons are 'helped'
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Isn't this just plain photoelectric effect but the novel thing is that thrust is generated because the electrons are apparently all released in the same direction?
So I imagine it isn't really 'fuel free' in the sense of that it would still need some source of electrons eventually.
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It doesn't 'violate' charge conservation. You build up a positive charge as you run. Pretty soon the positive charge becomes so huge that your thruster ceases to work. You can make it work again by neutralizing your charge.
Paint one side. (Score:2)
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Hmmm ... you mean "really cool" in the "it will do more useful stuff" sense of the word? Or in the sense of adding a spoiler and neon running lights to a beat up Honda Civic "might be really cool"?
Or maybe the painted side could have a jolly roger on it to play space pirate?
Honestly, is painting one side functional?
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Oh, you've seen my whip. Pretty badass, huh?
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Or in the sense of adding a spoiler and neon running lights to a beat up Honda Civic "might be really cool"?
To this [hotrod.com] or this [lucasoil.com] 1999 Civic SI? Sure.
Running BFG street tires, Eibach coil-over suspension and 17 psi of boost, we ran over 211 mph at Area 52. ... Though the engine has produced as much as 728 hp at 29 psi of boost, the boost was run at only 13-14 psi for the record runs.
Reportedly, there are (obviously, not completely stock, but many street-legal) Civics out there with 500-1000+ HP.
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Oh, don't get me wrong .. I get there are some actual badass Civics out there. I've seen all the Fast and the Furious films. ;-)
But I've also seen the piece of crap cars with all of the stickers and none of the mods with the cheap-ass plastic spoiler held on with duct tape and rolling on bald tires.
I don't know which of these two painting one side of the graphene this sail gets us.
Fuelless (Score:3)
Re:Fuelless (Score:5, Funny)
If only there was a giant source of light in the galaxy constantly releasing more energy then we ever could hope to use that we could harness...
Re:Fuelless (Score:5, Funny)
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There's really no reason you couldn't tack up sun. Just need some mirrors. It wouldn't be as effective as sailing down sun but it would work.
BTW, I'm really looking forward to the day that 'sailing down sun' and 'tacking up sun' is a thing.
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To a degree you can use the magnetic field. There's also the difference in how a solar sail reacts against the solar wind vs light.
As history has shown us (Score:4, Funny)
All great discoveries can be summed up with three simple letters... WTF
Possibly misattributed to Isaac Asimov, but... (Score:2)
Re:Possibly misattributed to Isaac Asimov, but... (Score:4, Funny)
"The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!) but rather, 'hmm... that's funny...'" - Isaac Asimov
Usually followed shortly thereafter by "I wonder: was that just a random event or will it do that a second time...."
..."
Sometimes followed by: "... Dialing 911
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Just like sometime in the future the last human words heard will be "Wonder what happens if you push this button?".
Re:Possibly misattributed to Isaac Asimov, but... (Score:4, Informative)
> technology should be indistinguishable from magic
That would be Clarke, Arthur C.
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- Clarke's Third law.
"Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced."
- Gehm's Corollary to Clarke's Third Law.
"Any technology sufficiently complex will cause the user to generate useless mystical rites designed to aid in its use"
- Jarik's corollary to Gehm's Corollary to Clarke's Third Law.
Twofer (Score:5, Informative)
A quick search on converting photons to electrons turned this up:
http://cleantechnica.com/2013/... [cleantechnica.com]
A new discovery by researchers at the ICFO has revealed that graphene is even more efficient at converting light into electricity than previously known. Graphene is capable of converting a single photon of light into multiple electrons able to drive electric current.
So that could be where the extra electrons are coming from.
Re: Twofer (Score:3, Informative)
I guess they really mean each photon excited multiple electrons and not creates. It takes a lot more energy to create one.
Who cares, it flies! (Score:3)
Combine it with an EM drive: double the speed & double the mystery. Maybe if you mix baffling with confounding you get a multiplier effect instead of just doubling. (That's the way the entropy seems to work with compounded software bugs.)
Prior Art (Score:2)
I figured this out when I was like seven years old. You just hook up one of these to a space ship and fly straight to Jupiter.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/w... [wikimedia.org]
Like the sailor that blow into his sail... (Score:2)
I'm just sharing a curious idea that came to my mind while reading the summary, what if we mount laser on the spacecraft that got a "graphene sail". I mean, AFAIK laser doesn't generate any trust (if it was the case, we could probably use fuel-free laser engine). And laser on graphene generate trust.
Please help me find where's the error, my brain hurt.
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Well, without actually reading the article itself I'll venture an opinion of course. If you carried the fuel and lasers yourself it wouldn't be like the sailor blowing on his own sail at all; it's be like the sailor facing the stern and blowing his ship forward. That's because the ship would still be powered by the rearward expulsion of electrons.
The advantage of the system with an external laser is (I presume) that even though it is no doubt very energy inefficient, since all you're expelling is electron
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Radiometer (Score:2)
light pushes the fins of a radiometer in a vacuum - could this be a similar phenomenon??
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi... [wikimedia.org]
Achievement unlocked! (Score:5, Funny)
Do you ever get the paranoid feeling that someone is occasionally modifying the laws of physics in order to advance the plot?
"Oh look, they're going to be stuck on Earth for an excruciatingly long time due to the exponential-propellent-scaling problem. Let's add a new capability to graphene that will give them a work-around for that."
I claim that two years ago the exact same graphene experiment would have shown no unexpected results; but now in 2015 we see this suspiciously useful behavior appear. I'm not sure how to test my hypothesis though :)
Re:Achievement unlocked! (Score:5, Funny)
You're not supposed to talk about the expansions like that. This is a RP server.
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This one is so funny, I wish I had mod points!
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Only when I observe the magnetic pattern of the sea floor, and realize we're more than 500,000 years overdue for a magnetic pole flip ...
The underlying process seems to be random [wikipedia.org], so we're not necessarily 500,000 years 'overdue'.
The recent weakening [wikipedia.org] is 'within spec'. If it does flip, it could do so rather quickly [discovery.com].
As much as 40 cm huh? (Score:5, Funny)
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There's no such thing as absolute motion, unless you still believe in the aether.
In which case, you're measuring motion relative to the aether.
For sufficiently short itineraries (Score:2)
Well, as long as your space travel goal is 40cm or less, we've got you covered!
It's kind of like expecting to do work on an iPad. Sure, you can do all sorts of things, as long as your standards are low enough and your definition of "work" is exceptionally loose.
crafts? (Score:2)
The plural of craft is crafts - when you're talking about embroidery, woodcarving & the like.
When you're talking about vessels, it's just craft.
The basic idea is not new (Score:2)
I've been hearing about the hypothetical possibility of spacecraft where at least part of the drive capacity is fueled by energy beamed to it from earth or some other large "stationary" (i.e. not attempting to change orbit) object in the form of laser light, for ages.
That doesn't make this any less neat - it sounds like what they've found, if they can harness it from theoretical science to proper working technology, is a much more *efficient* way of consuming the energy being thus beamed - but the basic ide
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Void rays.
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Hoverboards with freekin LASERS!
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Re: HOVERBOARDS PLEASE (Score:2)
No, no, no. Jumping the shark (with frickin laser beams attached) with a hoverboard.
Re:Scientists discover (Score:4, Informative)
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Does this mean we'll finally get a version of the Crookes Radiometer [wikipedia.org] that works as a light pressure engine and not just a heat engine? All this space nonsense is abstract to me, I want something I can hold in my own damn hands!
And I also want a pony!
Seriously, as long as we're speculating, can we all please admit that this is finally the breakthrough we need to reach warpgate technology?
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"warpgate technology"
Eh? How so?
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Actually, if this is as described, why not build up a charge and use that to propel another craft. Now if that craft is really a self contained warpgate, then you could build it like a railroad. Ships go through each gate, picking up charge and draining the gate. Kind of like the trip Jodi Foster took in Contact.
If you were trying to get to another star, then you wouldn't want them to orbit the sun, so maintaining alignment might be a problem. Once you are half way to where ever, you could use the
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--[some old bash.org quote I can't find at the moment]
Re:Crookes Radiometer (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, just what I was thinking (today nobody remembers Crookes (I named a cat after him)). Key bit of missing information in the article - how good a vacuum? Really matters. And just measuring a hard vacuum as made fools out of a lot of people.
There are other possibilities - our country paid people to publish false and misleading papers (no - they have not been retracted) . This doesn't even become news IMO until it is published and replicated.
The amount of technology that has been 'borrowed' by the Chinese is mind boggling - unprecedented. Yet it takes a particular kind of culture to understand the technology in a way that lets them synthesize further progress. A lot of the papers I see coming out of China are just 'cargo cult science' - looks like science - but it isn't. It takes a particular set of values - held dear and close to the heart - to do real science.
The grant proposal industry has diluted the quality of papers so that a very small minority represent real science. I would think of this as likely just bad science once again.
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Re:Obviously (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder if they've weighed the sponges. One possibility is that the sponges are deteriorating in a particular direction, thus engaging in conventional "stuff out one end makes you go the other way" propulsion. And also becoming traditional "will get used up" style fuel in the process. :)
Though it'd be all kinds of awesome if it was creating coherent motion out of energy delivered by photons without wearing out. Now *that* could be a space drive.
Re:Obviously (Score:4, Informative)
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The EM drive is pseudoscientific rubbish. Conservation of momentum is a buzzkill and there's no way around it. As for this discovery, one of two things will happen:
1. They will 'discover' that it uses no reaction mass, in which case it can safely be discredited as pseudoscience.
2. They will discover that there is indeed reaction mass involved. Actually that's what it says there in the article: "Instead, they think the graphene absorbs laser energy and builds up a charge of electrons. Eventually it can't hol
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Well, there might be some sort of principle for a new and better ion drive of some sort buried in there. Its all certainly worth investigating, as any "WTF!" moment of this sort is. The hype about reactionless drives certainly is drivel though, and it seems your average peruser of online science fora has little or no clue about small things like Noether's Principle, which pretty well guarantees nobody is violating Conservation of Momentum, ever.
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What about creating the reaction mass from the photons of the laser?
Re:Obviously (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it's not pseudoscience.
If a researcher perfoms an experiment and gets a very strange, unexpected result, what should he do? Say "that result is clearly impossible, so I shall just disregard it"?
No, he will try to repeat the experiment, gather data, and try to figure out what's going on. Maybe (most likely) there's a perfectly valid explanation within existing scientific frameworks, maybe it's a setup or measurement error, or maybe, just maybe, this is a new effect that hadn't been discovered yet. So the scientist tries to figure that out, and tells others about the experiments so they can try the same thing and see if they get similar results.
That's how science works.
I'm sure you would have called the theory of relativity "pseudoscience" back in the day of Newtonian physics. New things do get discovered sometimes. As long as it's being researched using scientific methods, that's science and not pseudoscience. Yes, they probably will be wrong. That doesn't mean it's not science.
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And maybe he will describe the effect so well in an equation that some bored patent clerk will call it a transformation and assume it is one of the fundamental laws of the universe....and then everybody wil
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They also raised the issue that, if that were actually the case, you would end up with a dangerous level of positive charge. Without being able to neutralize the charge, this would not make for a good propulsion syste
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A good scientist doesn't waste time on bullshit. And violating momentum conservation is bullshit.
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If conservation of momentum were not true, it would break 99.999% of our understanding of physics.
FTFY.
If man's law defining conservation of momentum is found to have a loophole, then physics as defined by the universe will work the same way it always has. It's just our definition that's been broken, which would mean that every other theory we've created that's been supported by this law would have to be brought back to hypothesis and reworked into a new theory of how things work based on new evidence.
To think that it's unlikely that conservation of momentum will be discovered to have a loophole we did
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Re:Obviously (Score:5, Insightful)
Furthermore, their ability to second-guess the credentialed experts is improved exponentially by posting AC.
Re:Obviously (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't really have to have much knowledge about anything to second guess experts in any field. Just hold to the rule that "all amazing results are caused by inaccurate measurement, poor sampling, cognitive leaps or coincidence" and you'll be right 70% of the time.
The actual breakthroughs will be so old hat by the time they have been tested properly that nobody will talk about them and you'll never eat crow.
Remember, cynicism and wisdom lead to the same result most of the time, only wisdom is so much harder to learn.
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I doubt that.
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Not to worry, he had religion to take care of that for him.
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I'm pretty sure Galileo wasn't attacked by the church for any of his scientific work.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G... [wikipedia.org]
I would call that attacked for his scientific work. He was placed on house arrest (for life) in 1632.
Re: Obviously (Score:3)
He definitely was attacked for his scientific work - heliocentrism was banned and Galileo had been investigated multiple times. However he did himself no favours by putting the pope's words into the mouth of a character called Simplicio who is depicted as a fool.
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Anytime Galileo is brought up it's as proof that the Church is/was anti-science; which is patently false. Don't get pissy because your example is bad.
Re:Needs Independent 2nd Party Verification (Score:5, Insightful)
"Hey scientists of the world, we pointed a laser at some graphene, and something weird happened. Here's what we did, will you give it a go and see if we're tripping balls, or have discovered something awesome?"
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No. Nobody has noticed this. You're the first. Thank god you're keeping scientists of the world grounded.
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If I read this correctly, the decisive advantage this has over conventional solar sails, is that instead of turning a fraction of the (feeble) momentum of photons into useful movement (basically by bouncing photons around), this discovery turns (apparently, most of) the energy of those photons into a coherent emission of electrons, which give off orders of magnitude more useful momentum.
So, it's not quite a solar sail, but rather a very very very light and efficient solar-powered electron cannon.
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That was my first thought as well, but this works in a vacuum. But with the surface area of graphene, maybe it's trapping enough air to still make it do the same thing...for a while.
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I thought the same thing. Maybe it's not the low mass that matters, but the high surface area that's enabling it to trap a lot of air inside.