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Solar-powered space flight

7d. Achieving the desired level of optical precision: Why it is harder to achieve these characteristics in low-g conditions

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7.6          It is more difficult to achieve the desired position accuracy in a very low or zero g environment because  is then several orders of magnitude smaller than the circa 8 – 14 ms-2 applicable in the above proposed pre-orbital trajectory. We can still ensure that  predominates in the calculation of  by making  large enough. But in the calculation of  we find that  generally has the ‘wrong’ sign and hence (for small )  is in the positive rather than negative x direction.

 

Overcoming this undesirable feature when  is small is likely to require an impractically large  or some sort of boom that allows us to apply a force to the mirror in the positive x direction. Such a boom adds mass. Alternatively, we would need to use an inflatable concentrator (the pressure within the inflated part then providing the necessary force in the positive rather than the negative x direction).

 

We might seek to dispense with most of the stanchions and instead include concentric wires within the mirror surface that mitigate tension differentials that would otherwise arise across the mirror surface.   would then be non-zero in each region within consecutive concentric wires, and at each edge of each such region we would, in effect, be able to reset  and   to be closer to what we would like by choosing a suitable tension for the wires themselves. However, it would then be difficult to avoid having some stanchions scattered across the mirror as if they were all attached to the outer rim of the mirror then they would in aggregate provide too much centripetal acceleration, causing the rim to bend back in on itself.

 

7.7          The above comments apply, in broad terms, to any optical concentrator. Suppose that we have a concentrator with focal length . To first order, near its optical axis,  and ,  so to first order we have:

 

 

So if we want  whenever  (which would be desirable in any region where there wasn’t a stanchion or if we wish to avoid a boom or inflated structure) we ideally want . Practical concentrators are likely to have dimensions not hugely different to their focal length, so we conclude that ideally their sizes should also be of the order of at least .

 

Ideally, we would also want  and  whenever  in any region where there wasn’t a stanchion or a tension wire, i.e. for  to be small in relation to . But if  is too small then we would have  negative at the mirror rim, since  needs to be negative there for a practical stanchion configuration, see earlier.

 


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