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Solar-powered space flight

3a. Power required to reach earth orbit ignoring atmospheric drag: Assuming that we launch vertically upwards, with constant exhaust velocity

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3.1          The optimal use of propellant for a solar-powered vehicle differs significantly from that applicable with a conventional chemical rocket in any pre-orbital phase. Typically, before orbit is reached, it is optimal for a chemical rocket to accelerate as fast as possible (subject to any limits imposed by the engineering of the vehicle itself). In contrast, a more leisurely approach is optimal for a solar-powered rocket, because the longer the flight time the more energy the solar power collector can collect.

 

3.2          For solar-powered flight,  can be assumed to be essentially constant (at least in the vicinity of the earth), unlike with chemical rocketry where  is proportional to propellant used per unit time. In this section we ignore atmospheric drag even though this assumption is obviously unrealistic. In section 4 we discuss the impact of atmospheric drag.

 

3.3          In each case we will generally wish to work out how to minimise  per unit , since all other things being equal this is equivalent to minimising the area of the solar power collector per unit final payload and hence presumably the mass of the collector. The optimal approach will in turn depend on the choice of , and therefore by implication also on the ratio  , i.e. on the ratio of propellant mass to vehicle plus payload mass.

 

3.4          Consider first a hypothetical scenario where we launch using solar-powered propulsion from the surface of the earth into earth orbit. One possible way of estimating the power requirements of such a vehicle would be to assume that we would accelerate vertically upwards until we reached orbital velocity. In these circumstances (which would in fact fail to result in the vehicle reaching orbit),  and the following equations apply, derived from conservation of energy and momentum:

 

 

3.5          If, say,  = 5,000 ms-1 then flight metrics for various ratios of  including the power required per unit ‘lifted’ mass (i.e. mass of vehicle and engine at the end of the trajectory, but not propellant) and the propellant to lifted mass ratios are as per Table 1.

 

Table 1. Flight characteristics to reach  for a range of , if propellant is ejected vertically downwards at constant speed  = 5000 ms-1

 

 (kW/kg)

Ratio of propellant to lifted mass

 (kW per kg lifted mass)

Flight time to reach orbital velocity (s)

Maximum acceleration ms-2

150

4.8

872

69

316

100

5.3

625

105

228

50

6.6

379

217

137

40

7.6

342

276

123

30

9.2

307

376

110

25

11.2

305

459

109

20

14.6

313

585

112

15

23.3

364

799

132

 

 

3.6          These results do not initially look encouraging. The high maximum acceleration arises because the rate of acceleration rises with time, see Figure 1 for one of the above .

 

Figure 1. Plot of vehicle velocity and mass as a function of time, if propellant ejected at a constant speed vertically downwards, if  = 30 kW/kg.

 

 


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