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- From: roberts@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov (John Roberts)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: Re: solar sails
- Message-ID: <C1C3xs.33E.1@cs.cmu.edu>
- Date: 24 Jan 93 01:15:08 GMT
- Article-I.D.: cs.C1C3xs.33E.1
- Sender: news+@cs.cmu.edu
- Distribution: sci
- Organization: National Institute of Standards and Technology formerly National Bureau of Standards
- Lines: 19
- Approved: bboard-news_gateway
- X-Added: Forwarded by Space Digest
- Original-Sender: isu@VACATION.VENARI.CS.CMU.EDU
-
-
- -From: MLINDROOS@FINABO.ABO.FI (Marcus Lindroos INF)
- -Subject: Re: Solar sails
- -Date: 23 Jan 93 08:39:41 GMT
- -Organization: Abo Akademi University, Finland
-
- -There was another proposal as well. A small space probe suspended behind a
- -giant solar sail (2km across, total mass of one hundred kg(?)) would reach
- -Alpha Centauri in 250 years if we make a close flyby of the Sun - one solar
- -radius from the surface (0.7 million km). Is there a way to manufacture an
- -ultra-light sail able to withstand the temperature (4000-5000K at least)?
-
- Do you have access to the math behind that proposal? It should be impressive -
- for instance, the sail has to withstand something around 50 MW/m^2.
- (The inverse-square law wouldn't exactly apply as far as photon thrust is
- concerned at that distance, but it should be less than a factor of two off.)
-
- John Roberts
- roberts@cmr.ncsl.nist.gov
-