Wednesday, 18 November 2015

What is E-Sail?


What is E-Sail?
E-sail is a proposed form of spacecraft propulsion using the dynamic pressure of the solar wind as a source of thrust. It creates a "virtual" sail by using small wires to form an electric field that deflects solar wind protons and extracts their momentum.

All this sounds good but is it operational for robotic spacecrafts?
A study into the system, known as  Heliopause Electrostatic Rapid Transit System (HERTS), has received two rounds of funding from NASA, and if successful could be in use next decade.

The system uses 10 to 20 extremely long and thin wires of up to 12 miles long and only 25 microns in diameter. By applying a high voltage to the wires while keeping them sideways to the solar wind flow, the reactionary force from the protons in solar wind bouncing off the wires would be enough to accelerate the spacecraft to never before seen speeds of up to 150km/s.

Those speeds would be enough for any spacecraft using HERTS to reach the heliopause in less than a decade from launch - something that took the Voyager 1 spacecraft almost 35 years.

Further testing is still required to ensure the high voltage in the wires would be enough to keep them from being ‘blown’ sideways, making the system useless. Results of further testing in this area are expected within two years.

Article:
http://www.space.com/31063-electric-sail-solar-wind-space-exploration.html

Know more about HERTS:
https://www.nasa.gov/content/heliopause-electrostatic-rapid-transit-system-herts/

Know more about E-sail:
http://www.electric-sailing.com/index.html

Image:
Artist's illustration of a spacecraft powered by an "electric sail," which would gain momentum from protons in the solar wind.
Credit: Alexandre Szames, Antigravite, Paris, France

#space   #nasa   #esail   #HERTS

15 comments:

  1. E-sail could make asteroid mining feasible by providing essentially free logistics in the solar system outside of Earth's magnetosphere...but before that we need to find a suitable water bearing asteroid.
    Manned Mars flights will be affordable and much more frequent.

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  2. Oooh that is seriously clever.

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  3. I assume the high voltage will come from batteries? Even if charged by solar cells, how long can they last?

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  4. Corina Marinescu manned Mars flights are still way off and only feasible every second year or so.

    Did you read the waibutwhy post on spacex?

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  5. Nicolai Imset -- if there's not much current flowing, there's not much drain on the batteries.  (Added awesomeness: the voltage helps keep the wires separated and aligned via charge repulsion.)

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  6. I'm going to have to read the original more closely, Antenna Wilde -- my thought was that they'd rely on repulsion of electrons in the solar wind.

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  7. ... a sailing ship ... count me in

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  8. Nicolai Imset
    Will read tonight in bed. Merci

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