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Here's an article that CNN has about nuclear power on space probes. I
list some questions about it below http://www.space.com/businesstechnol..._focus_040218- 1.html (Note the line wrap on link.) One thing that kind of bothers me is the statement that, "The Energy Department, working with industry, is designing a space-qualified nuclear fission reactor capable of generating 100 kilowatts of power -- about 1,000 times more than most solar-powered space probes have available today." Is it true that the average space probe today only uses about 100 Watts? I'm pretty sure that thin film collectors can produce up to several kilowatts per kilogram of PV panel (at Earth orbit insolation levels) and that fresnels or other concentrators can improve this power to weight ratio further. OTOH, the thermal energy produced by a kg of PU238 is about 500 Watts and a stirling may only allow them to get 30% of that converted into electricity. Furthermore, new technologies are allowing for even lighter weight PV and light weight solar thermal concentrators. I'd think that you'd have to be very far from the sun or doing fairly exotic things before an RTG only approach would be the best or the cheapest. Also, I was wondering about this. It seems to me that rather than using just Stirlings or just thermal diodes that it should be possible to use the Stirling as the primary source and the thermal diodes to top off. The diodes and thermionics are very light weight. They would remove some of the heat that would otherwise be available to the stirling engine, but if they didn't drop the overall temperature inordinately then I would think that they could still produce net power beyond what the Stirling alone could achieve. Modern thermal diodes can actually be quite efficient. But, of course, like I said above, these same technologies could also be used with solar concentrators on many space probes. -- __________________________________________________ ___ Quibbler (quibbler247atyahoo.com) "It is fashionable to wax apocalyptic about the threat to humanity posed by the AIDS virus, 'mad cow' disease, and many others, but I think a case can be made that faith is one of the world's great evils, comparable to the smallpox virus but harder to eradicate." -- Richard Dawkins |
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By looking at the MERs the solar panels have no future in robotic
exploration. They need to be faced towards the sun to produce anything and they require lots of space when deployed. You also need heavy onboard batteries to cover the blackouts. I seriously doubt solar panels can come anywhere near RTG in watts per kg comparison, especially if they operate on the planet with night/day cycles. |
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quibbler wrote:
Here's an article that CNN has about nuclear power on space probes. I list some questions about it below http://www.space.com/businesstechnol..._focus_040218- 1.html (Note the line wrap on link.) One thing that kind of bothers me is the statement that, "The Energy Department, working with industry, is designing a space-qualified nuclear fission reactor capable of generating 100 kilowatts of power -- about 1,000 times more than most solar-powered space probes have available today." Is it true that the average space probe today only uses about 100 Watts? I'm pretty sure that thin film collectors can produce up to several kilowatts per kilogram of PV panel (at Earth orbit insolation levels) and that fresnels or other concentrators can improve this power to weight ratio further. OTOH, the thermal energy produced by a kg of PU238 is about 500 Watts and a stirling may only allow them to get 30% of that converted into electricity. They're talking about a nuclear fission reactor when they are discussing the 100 KWs of power. This is different from an RTG, which just uses the heat due to natural decay. |
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quibbler wrote:
I'd think that you'd have to be very far from the sun or doing fairly exotic things before an RTG only approach would be the best or the cheapest. General rule of thumb is... Mars is PV, Jupiter is nuke. Trade off in the asteroids. -- Scott Lowther, Engineer Remove the obvious (capitalized) anti-spam gibberish from the reply-to e-mail address |
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quibbler wrote in message et...
In article , says... quibbler wrote: I'd think that you'd have to be very far from the sun or doing fairly exotic things before an RTG only approach would be the best or the cheapest. General rule of thumb is... Mars is PV, Jupiter is nuke. Trade off in the asteroids. Fair enough. Obviously inner planet missions like Venus orbiters would also find PV pretty appealing. I think that there is around 2.3 KW/m^2 in the proximity of venus. Off hand, do you know how much solar power one would get around Jupiter? (I know I could look it up or calculate it ![]() The Rosetta mission launching in a few days uses PV and its orbit perihelion takes it out to Jupiter's orbit. IIRC, it has enough to get 800W at Jupiter distance from Sun. For actual Jupiter missions, it would not be just the distance but also the radiation environment closer to the planet. PV output in Earth orbit degrades over time. An interesting question is if Galileo had PV with initial output equal to initial RTG output, would the PV output degrade faster than RTG output in the repeated passes close to Jupiter? |
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quibbler wrote in message et...
Here's an article that CNN has about nuclear power on space probes. I One thing that kind of bothers me is the statement that, "The Energy Department, working with industry, is designing a space-qualified nuclear fission reactor capable of generating 100 kilowatts of power -- about 1,000 times more than most solar-powered space probes have available today." Is it true that the average space probe today only uses about 100 Watts? I'm pretty sure that thin film collectors can produce up to several kilowatts per kilogram of PV panel (at Earth orbit insolation levels) and that fresnels or other concentrators can improve this power to weight ratio further. OTOH, the thermal energy produced by a kg of PU238 is about 500 Watts and a stirling may only allow them to get 30% of that converted into electricity. Furthermore, new technologies are allowing for even lighter weight PV and light weight solar thermal concentrators. I'd think that you'd have to be very far from the sun or doing fairly exotic things before an RTG only approach would be the best or the cheapest. The article was about reactors, not RTGs, which are different kinds of nuclear power sources. Also, Pu238 powered RTGs only have maybe around 5W/kg for the RTG (about 1% of bulk Pu238 power (heat) output density). They do overstate the difference between reactors and PV arrays. Most solar powered spacecraft today use several hundred watts at least, unless they're some sort of micro-satellite. And commercial satellite power technology is right now able to deliver tens of kilowatts of power via PV arrays. I think the current state of the art is somewhere around 25-ish kilowatts of *delivered*, usable electric power via PV arrays for commsats. The advantage of reactors and RTGs is that they're more compact, sometimes more mass efficient, and quite often more convenient. PV arrays require proper pointing and only work well in direct sunlight near the Sun. And even in Watts per kg the PV arrays aren't all that stellar once you factor in all the necessary subsystems (power converters, cooling, etc.) |
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In article ,
Mike Chan wrote: ...Off hand, do you know how much solar power one would get around Jupiter? ... The Rosetta mission launching in a few days uses PV and its orbit perihelion takes it out to Jupiter's orbit. IIRC, it has enough to get 800W at Jupiter distance from Sun. No, its solar arrays will deliver only about 350-400W at Jupiter's distance. (Versus 8700 near Earth.) It will set a new distance record for solar-powered spacecraft, at around 5AU; if memory serves, the previous record was set by NEAR at a mere 2.2AU. Solar-powered operation out near Jupiter is not impossible, merely very difficult. Rosetta is paying heavily -- in money, in mass, in deployment worries, in moment of inertia that makes turns difficult -- for those huge solar arrays that make it possible. For actual Jupiter missions, it would not be just the distance but also the radiation environment closer to the planet. PV output in Earth orbit degrades over time. An interesting question is if Galileo had PV with initial output equal to initial RTG output, would the PV output degrade faster than RTG output in the repeated passes close to Jupiter? Rather a lot faster, I believe, but I don't have numbers. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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