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Ion Engines Could Take Us to the Solar Gravitational Lens in Less Than 13 Years

Universe Today Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 12:00pm

Sending an object to another star is still the stuff of science fiction. But some concrete missions could get us at least part way there. These “interstellar precursor missions” include a trip to the Solar Gravitational Lens point at 550 AU from the Sun – farther than any artificial object has ever been, including Voyager. To get there, we’ll need plenty of new technologies, and a recent paper presented at the 75th International Astronautical Congress in Milan this month looks at one of those potential technologies – electric propulsion systems, otherwise known as ion drives. 

The paper aimed to assess when any existing ion drive technology could port a large payload on one of several trajectories, including a trip around Jupiter, one visiting Pluto, and even one reaching that fabled Solar Gravitational Lens. To do so, they specified an “ideal” ion drive with characteristics that enabled optimal values for some of the system’s physical characteristics.

First among those characteristics is the power plant. Ion thrusters need a power source and an effective one if they will last more than a decade under thrust. The paper defined an ideal power plan that can output 1 kW per kg of weight. This is currently well outside the realm of possibility, with the best ion thruster power sources coming at something like 10 W per kg and even nuclear electric propulsion systems outputing 100 W per kg. Some potentially better technologies are on the horizon, but nothing tested in the literature would meet this requirement yet.

Fraser discusses the concept of the solar gravitational lens with Dr. Slava Turyshev

Thrust efficiency is another consideration for this idealized mission. The authors, who are writing under the banner of the Initiative for Interstellar Studies, a non-profit group based out of the UK, suggested that an idealized thrust efficiency is 97%. That would also significantly improve existing technologies, which average closer to 75-80% efficiency for working models. Additional improvements could increase this number, such as magnetic containment fields around the thruster’s walls. Still, as it gets closer to that 97% range, finding efficiency improvements becomes harder and harder.

The last characteristic the authors considered was the specific impulse. This one has the most comprehensive variability regarding the theoretical potential of all three systems. Their idealized value of 34,000-76,000 seconds of specific impulse is well within the bounds of the potential values for more speculative technologies. The paper mentions that specific impulse values twice the suggested upper range could be possible with the proper selection of thruster and propellant. They also point out that development on these technologies is stalled not because we can’t make drives with better specific impulse but because we can’t produce power plants that support them yet. So, solving the power plant issue will enable further development in this area.

Fraser discusses the details of ion engines and why they’re so efficient.

Suppose all three characteristics were combined into a complete functional propulsion system. In that case, the authors calculate that it could deliver a payload of almost 18,000 kg to the Solar Gravitational Lens in just 13 years – much faster than any previous mission would be capable of. But that optimization is still a long way off, and while there are missions planned for deployment to the SGL someday, it is still a long way off before they launch and even longer before they arrive there. In the meantime, engineers have some additional problems to solve if they want to optimize the potential of ion thrusters.

Learn More:
N Maraqten, D Fries, A Genovese – Advanced Electric Propulsion Systems with Optimal Specific Impulses for Fast Interstellar Precursor Missions
UT – Next Generation Ion Engines Will Be Extremely Powerful
UT – Ion Engines Could Work on Earth too, to Make Silent, Solid-State Aircraft
UT – The Most Powerful Ion Engine Ever Built Passes the Test

Lead Image:
Ion Thruster
Credit – NASA

The post Ion Engines Could Take Us to the Solar Gravitational Lens in Less Than 13 Years appeared first on Universe Today.

Categories: Science

Complex form of carbon spotted outside solar system for first time

New Scientist Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 12:00pm
Complex carbon-based molecules crucial to life on Earth originated somewhere in space, but we didn't know where. Now, huge amounts of them have been spotted in a huge, cold cloud of gas
Categories: Science

Your gut bacteria are at war - and force their enemies to switch sides

New Scientist Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 12:00pm
Rival tribes of bacteria armed with poison darts are fighting it out in your gut, with armies of traitors often winning the day
Categories: Science

Some wildfires are growing twice as fast as they did two decades ago

New Scientist Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 12:00pm
In the western US, the average maximum growth rate of fires has more than doubled over the past two decades
Categories: Science

Scientists discover molecules that store much of the carbon in space

Space and time from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 11:53am
A distant interstellar cloud was found to contain an abundance of pyrene, a type of large carbon-containing molecules known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). This suggest pyrene may have been the source of much of the carbon in our solar system.
Categories: Science

A new hydrogel semiconductor represents a breakthrough for tissue-interfaced bioelectronics

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 11:52am
The ideal material for interfacing electronics with living tissue is soft, stretchable, and just as water-loving as the tissue itself--in short, a hydrogel. Semiconductors, the key materials for bioelectronics such as pacemakers, biosensors, and drug delivery devices, on the other hand, are rigid, brittle, and water-hating, impossible to dissolve in the way hydrogels have traditionally been built. Scientists have now solved this challenge that has long stymied researchers, reimagining the process of creating hydrogels to build a powerful semiconductor in hydrogel form. The result is a bluish gel that flutters like a sea jelly in water but retains the immense semiconductive ability needed to transmit information between living tissue and machine.
Categories: Science

Battery-like device made from water and clay could be used on Mars

New Scientist Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:55am
A new supercapacitor design that uses only water, clay and graphene could source material on Mars and be more sustainable and accessible than traditional batteries
Categories: Science

Battery made from water and clay could be used on Mars

New Scientist Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:55am
A new battery design that uses only water, clay and graphene could source material on Mars and be more sustainable and accessible than traditional batteries
Categories: Science

From accessibility upgrades to a custom cat-food bowl, this mobile 3D printer can autonomously add features to a room

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:21am
Researchers created MobiPrint, a mobile 3D printer that can automatically measure a room and print objects onto the floor. The team's graphic interface lets users design objects in a space that the robot has mapped out. The prototype, which the team built on a modified consumer vacuum robot, can add a range of objects to rooms.
Categories: Science

From accessibility upgrades to a custom cat-food bowl, this mobile 3D printer can autonomously add features to a room

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:21am
Researchers created MobiPrint, a mobile 3D printer that can automatically measure a room and print objects onto the floor. The team's graphic interface lets users design objects in a space that the robot has mapped out. The prototype, which the team built on a modified consumer vacuum robot, can add a range of objects to rooms.
Categories: Science

Fire-risk blocking self-powered hydrogen production system

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:20am
By using a water-splitting system with an aqueous electrolyte, this system is expected to block fire risks and enable stable hydrogen production.
Categories: Science

Scientists develop grain-sized soft robots controlled by magnetic fields for targeted drug delivery

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:19am
A team of scientists has developed grain-sized soft robots that can be controlled using magnetic fields for targeted drug delivery, paving the way to possible improved therapies in future.
Categories: Science

Scientists develop grain-sized soft robots controlled by magnetic fields for targeted drug delivery

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:19am
A team of scientists has developed grain-sized soft robots that can be controlled using magnetic fields for targeted drug delivery, paving the way to possible improved therapies in future.
Categories: Science

Non-electric touchpad takes sensor technology to extreme conditions

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:19am
Researchers have developed the world's first soft touchpad that can sense the force, area and location of contact without electricity. The device utilizes pneumatic channels, enabling its use in environments such as MRI machines and other conditions that are unsuitable for electronic devices. Soft devices like soft robots and rehabilitation aids could also benefit from this new technology.
Categories: Science

Non-electric touchpad takes sensor technology to extreme conditions

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:19am
Researchers have developed the world's first soft touchpad that can sense the force, area and location of contact without electricity. The device utilizes pneumatic channels, enabling its use in environments such as MRI machines and other conditions that are unsuitable for electronic devices. Soft devices like soft robots and rehabilitation aids could also benefit from this new technology.
Categories: Science

Quantum experiments and high-performance computing: New methods enable complex calculations to be completed extremely quickly

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:19am
Scientists have used high-performance computing at large scales to analyze a quantum photonics experiment. In specific terms, this involved the tomographic reconstruction of experimental data from a quantum detector.
Categories: Science

Quantum experiments and high-performance computing: New methods enable complex calculations to be completed extremely quickly

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:19am
Scientists have used high-performance computing at large scales to analyze a quantum photonics experiment. In specific terms, this involved the tomographic reconstruction of experimental data from a quantum detector.
Categories: Science

New AI tool predicts protein-protein interaction mutations in hundreds of diseases

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:18am
Scientists have designed a publicly-available software and web database to break down barriers to identifying key protein-protein interactions to treat with medication. The computational tool is called PIONEER (Protein-protein InteractiOn iNtErfacE pRediction). Researchers demonstrated PIONEER's utility by identifying potential drug targets for dozens of cancers and other complex diseases.
Categories: Science

New method of flexing on electronics

Matter and energy from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:17am
If a phone or other electronic device was made of soft materials, how would that change its use? Would it be more durable? If hospital health monitoring equipment was made of less rigid components, would it make it easier for patients to wear? While electronics of that type may still be far in the future, researchers have developed an innovative method for constructing the soft electronic components that make them up.
Categories: Science

New method of flexing on electronics

Computers and Math from Science Daily Feed - Thu, 10/24/2024 - 10:17am
If a phone or other electronic device was made of soft materials, how would that change its use? Would it be more durable? If hospital health monitoring equipment was made of less rigid components, would it make it easier for patients to wear? While electronics of that type may still be far in the future, researchers have developed an innovative method for constructing the soft electronic components that make them up.
Categories: Science

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