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Solar-powered space flight

5a. Creating ultra-lightweight solar power concentrators: Design requirements

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5a.          Design requirements

 

5.1          The above analysis suggests that to make a significant contribution to any pre-orbital trajectory the vehicle would need to collect at least, say, circa 20 – 100 kW/kg of solar energy. How practical is this?

 

5.2          The solar power incident on each 1 m2 perpendicular to the sun’s rays in the vicinity of the earth (i.e. the solar constant) is roughly 1.37 kW. So if the collector were wholly perpendicular to the sun’s rays and conversion of solar energy to thrust were 100% efficient then a power requirement of 20 – 100 kW/kg would equate to 15 – 73 m2 per unit lifted mass.

 

5.3          Over the last few years there have been substantial advances in potential fabrication of giant ultra-low mass mirrors, principally driven by a renewed interest in solar sail technology. According to NASA (2005), conventional light solar sail film has comprised of 5-micron thin aluminised Mylar with a thin film aluminium layer (approximately 100 nm thick) deposited on one side to form a mirror with 90% reflectivity, weighing circa 7 g m-2. The solar sail that Team Encounter (2005) was planning to launch was reported to have a mass of less than 4 g m-2 (including payload). 15 – 73m2 of a 100% reflecting 5 g m-2 mirror would weigh only 0.08 – 0.37 kg, implying that, in theory, it ought to be possible for such a mirror to lift itself into orbit with some payload to spare, following use of chemical rocketry to lift the vehicle to a height at which atmospheric drag becomes small.

 

5.4          We next identify a way of concentrating sunlight by using mirrors of the sort now being developed for solar sails. Ideally the mirrors should:

 

(a)    Concentrate the sunlight by as much as possible. This should reduce the mass of any means of converting the sunlight into usable thrust and increase conversion efficiency;

 

(b)   Have a surface area as little as possible more than the collector area perpendicular to the sun’s rays; and

 

(c)    Be dragged ‘behind’ the vehicle (but without fouling propellant ejection), to enhance the stability of the vehicle in flight.

 


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