Author Topic: Solar Sailing  (Read 1925 times)

Offline rdale

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Solar Sailing
« on: 05/28/2009 07:38 pm »
    Solar sailing is a topic of growing technical and popular interest. Solar sail propulsion will make space exploration more affordable and offer access to destinations within (and beyond) the solar system that are currently beyond our technical reach. The lecture will describe solar sails, how they work, and what they will be used for in the exploration of space. It will include a discussion of current plans for solar sails and how advanced technology, such as nanotechnology, might enhance their performance. Much has been accomplished recently to make solar sail technology very close to becoming an engineering reality and it will soon be used by the world s space agencies in the exploration of the solar system and beyond. The first part of the lecture will summarize state-of-the-art space propulsion systems and technologies. Though these other technologies are the key to any deep space exploration by humans, robots, or both, solar-sail propulsion will make space exploration more affordable and offer access to distant and difficult destinations. The second part of the lecture will describe the fundamentals of space solar sail propulsion and will describe the near-, mid- and far-term missions that might use solar sails as a propulsion system. The third part of the lecture will describe solar sail technology and the construction of current and future sailcraft, including the work of both government and private space organizations.

http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20090019561_2009016499.pdf (large file - 33MB)

Offline JulesVerneATV

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Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #1 on: 06/19/2025 09:24 am »

Offline redneck

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Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #2 on: 06/19/2025 09:40 am »
One of the future accessories to solar sails will be beamed energy, probably laser. When leaving Earth or another planet, lasers assist the sail in gaining initial momentum. At the destination, lasers help deceleration from considerable distances. Consider Mars deceleration starting at millions of kilometers before the sail detaches to allow the craft proper to reenter. Detached sail rendezvous with an Earth bound payload that the laser helps accelerate out of Mars gravity field. Can start small and scale up as technology, politics, and need allows.

Offline edzieba

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Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #3 on: 06/19/2025 11:43 am »
A Better Way to Turn Solar Sails

https://www.universetoday.com/articles/a-better-way-to-turn-solar-sails
Use of LCD-based RDCs allows for varying the magnitude of the force vector, but not its direction. Other RCDs could allow vector pointing (e.g. CotS DMD arrays, or MEMS louvres).

Offline Tywin

Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #4 on: 06/19/2025 05:21 pm »
The knowledge is power...Everything is connected...
The Turtle continues at a steady pace ...

Offline Twark_Main

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Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #5 on: 06/23/2025 05:49 pm »
A Better Way to Turn Solar Sails

https://www.universetoday.com/articles/a-better-way-to-turn-solar-sails
Use of LCD-based RDCs allows for varying the magnitude of the force vector, but not its direction. Other RCDs could allow vector pointing (e.g. CotS DMD arrays, or MEMS louvres).

True, but obviously you don't need to vary the force direction to steer a spacecraft. You can do it with multiple RCDs (effectively "differential thrust") or even just a single RCD if the sail is rotating. Spin rate can be controlled by having a pair of RCDs tilted at opposite angles.

Offline Vultur

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Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #6 on: 06/25/2025 04:57 am »
Deorbit sats too...


I think these drag sails are strictly speaking a different thing (though probably a related technology). At lower LEO altitudes, atmospheric drag is much greater than radiation pressure.

Offline Twark_Main

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Re: Solar Sailing
« Reply #7 on: 06/25/2025 05:35 pm »
Deorbit sats too...


I think these drag sails are strictly speaking a different thing (though probably a related technology). At lower LEO altitudes, atmospheric drag is much greater than radiation pressure.

Plus that drag sail looks like it deploys with rigid booms. Paradoxically that design can increase the collision probability, because now you have (say) 3x the catastrophic collision area but only half the orbital lifespan. Alternatives like Gossamer Orbit Lowering Device (GOLD) try to address this by making the entire drag device as a thin film, to minimize the breakup risk to the other object.

Solar sails don't have that problem fortunately, but they can still benefit from using lightweight inflatable tubes for rigidity.

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