This artist's conception shows a solar sail high above the Earth. |
Solar Sails
What Is a Solar Sail?
By Adam Mann
Like mariners of
ancient days, cosmic adventurers might one day harness the power of sails to
journey through the stars.
But rather than the
ocean's wind, future space travelers would use sunlight to drive a technology
known as a solar sail.
How do solar sails work?
Solar sails are a
spacecraft propulsion method utilizing a curious quirk of photons.
These particles of
light have no mass and yet when they impinge on something, they can impart
momentum and provide a tiny push.
You get shoved by
photons every time you step out into the sunshine but their incredibly small
force is essentially unnoticeable to your body.
In space, things
take a different turn.
The laws of physics
state that every action must have an equal
and opposite reaction, so, when photons from the sun
bounce off a spaceship, the ship is propelled ever so slightly in a direction
away from the sun.
With a single
photon the change is negligible but a large collection of them can provide
significant thrust.
Place a large,
flat, mirror-like sheet in front of a spacecraft and the sun's power will push
it forward.
The material must
also be strong and gossamer-thin in order to catch and control the sunlight.
Solar sails can
tack like regular sails to travel in many directions, according to the Planetary
Society.
The technology has
an advantage over other propulsion methods because a ship does not need to
carry fuel wherever it goes, instead relying on the freely-available light of
stars.
Since they get a
continuous push from the sun, solar-sail-powered ships can constantly
accelerate as they journey to the edge of the solar system, achieving super-fast speeds that would be
much more difficult for chemical rockets.
Alternatively,
solar sails can also be driven by gargantuan laser beams.
Examples of solar sails
NASA tested the concept of solar
sailing in 1974 with its Mariner 10 spacecraft,
which was designed to fly past Venus and Mercury.
When the probe ran
out of fuel, mission control turned its solar panels to just the right angle to
catch the sun's rays and push the spacecraft forward.
The first human-made solar sail to
successfully fly was the Japanese Space Exploration Agency's Interplanetary
Kite-craft Accelerated by Radiation Of the Sun (IKAROS) spacecraft.
The robot deployed
its 46-foot-wide (14 meters) sail in June 2010 and proved the ability to
control its direction and change orientation on command.
That same year,
NASA launched the tiny NanoSail-D demonstrator mission, which had a
diamond-shaped sail 10 feet (3 m) to a side.
The probe unfurled
its solar sail in 2011 and circled the Earth for eight months before burning up
in the atmosphere.
Lightweight and
with little room to carry fuel, small satellites are thought to be ideal
candidates for this type of propulsion.
In 2015, the
Planetary Society launched the LightSail-1 spacecraft
into orbit, which sported a 344-square-foot (32-square-m) solar sail, about the
size of a boxing ring.
Despite some
successes, and a selfie or two, the mission
suffered from technical glitches and eventually stopped transmitting signals
before entering the atmosphere a few weeks
after it was launched.
But the Planetary
Society is back at it and has high hopes for their new LightSail-2 mission. Launching at the
end of June 2019, the craft is about the size of a bread loaf and intends to
release a similarly-sized sail as its predecessor.
Mission planners
said that one day solar-sail-driven ships could travel to the edge of the solar
system or beyond.
The Breakthrough Starshot
Initiative intends to do just that, sending lightweight microchip-sized
probes to explore the nearest star system, Alpha Centauri, which is 4.3
light-years away.
Announced in 2016, the $100-million venture is investigating the feasibility of using a colossal Earth-based laser to accelerate the chips to 20% the speed of light and reaching Alpha Centauri in only 20 years.
Adam Mann is a journalist specializing in
astronomy and physics stories. His work has appeared in the Wall Street
Journal, Wired, Nature, Science, New Scientist, and many other places. He
lives in Oakland, California, where he enjoys riding his bike. Follow him on
Twitter @adamspacemann.
https://www.space.com/solar-sail.html
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