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Tony Rusi wrote:
put the ISS in the inclination as the moon? Yes, (assuming you meant "same inclination") but there would be little point. -- http://inquisitor.i.am/ | | Ian Stirling. ---------------------------+-------------------------+-------------------------- Tad Williams has an interesting new fantasy: http://www.shadowmarch.com/ |
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![]() Lasers will be utterly useless. What makes you think they would do anything to the ISS's orbit ??? Well photo-pressure for one thing, but really I was thinking about the idea below. I was assuming you could generate extra electrical power aboard the ISS by hitting the PV-arrays with the proper wavelength. That electrical power would be used to power the e-tethers with no impact on the power budget of the ISS. Thus re-boost fuel would never have to be brought up to the ISS again. I believe the ISS experiences about three pounds of drag force at its median altitude. Is there any reason given enough time, that the ISS could not be moved to L5, using lasers and e-tethers to create a permanent space station? The re-entry of skylab, the salyuts, and mir seem to be such a waste, they too could have been placed at L1 and L5. |
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In article ,
Tony Rusi wrote: I was assuming you could generate extra electrical power aboard the ISS by hitting the PV-arrays with the proper wavelength. At least in principle, yes. Bear in mind that they are pointed at the Sun, not at the Earth, although they could be Earth-pointed easily enough during orbital night. A bigger problem is, just how many laser stations were you thinking of building? Bear in mind that ISS is within sight of any particular point on the ground for only a few minutes, a few times a day. That electrical power would be used to power the e-tethers with no impact on the power budget of the ISS. Almost certainly it is easier to increase available power by just adding more solar arrays. Thus re-boost fuel would never have to be brought up to the ISS again. Approaches like this were seriously considered. One practical problem is that the tether will occasionally be cut by space debris. Another is that the detailed physics of orbiting electrodynamic tethers are not very well understood, so performance prediction is difficult. ...Is there any reason given enough time, that the ISS could not be moved to L5... Two big ones. First, ISS's electronics -- never mind its people! -- are not sufficiently radiation-hard to handle slowly working its way out through the Van Allen belts. Second, the effectiveness of electrodynamic tethers deteriorates rapidly as altitude rises, because both the strength of Earth's magnetic field and the density of the local plasma fall off quickly with altitude. -- MOST launched 1015 EDT 30 June, separated 1046, | Henry Spencer first ground-station pass 1651, all nominal! | |
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JRS: In article , seen in
news:sci.space.tech, Gordon D. Pusch posted at Wed, 9 Jul 2003 08:26:53 :- However, there would be very little point in doing so, since the plane of the ISS's orbit was chosen to make it accessible to vehicles launched from Kennedy Spaceport and Baikonur Cosmodrome, and lowering its inclination to match the Moon's would make it inaccessible to anyone not launching from a facility near the equator (i.e., no one but the ESA). The Moon can be overhead from parts of Florida, I believe; did not the Columbiad depend on that? Then the ESA are not the only ones who can launch from near the Equator. The Russians have, I believe, an agreement to use Kourou, and doubtless other friendly countries might negotiate similar with the ESA. Then the Indians - the proper ones, nor the Reds - must be launching from moderately low latitude already, and should be able to find a site below ten degrees north. Sea Launch can manage the equator exactly, if required. -- © John Stockton, Surrey, UK. Turnpike v4.00 MIME. © Web URL:http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/ - FAQqish topics, acronyms & links; some Astro stuff via astro.htm, gravity0.htm; quotes.htm; pascal.htm; &c, &c. No Encoding. Quotes before replies. Snip well. Write clearly. Don't Mail News. |
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In article ,
Tony Rusi wrote: I used to work with a 25 year vet from TRW. He said that even the backs of PV-arrays generate some power when facing the earth and are collecting earthshine. I'm a bit skeptical about that, because the cells are usually mounted on a backing plate, or at least a backing film, and the usual materials for that are thoroughly opaque. (Some early spacecraft used double-sided arrays, which may be what he was thinking of.) Approaches like this were seriously considered. One practical problem is that the tether will occasionally be cut by space debris... Hoyt and Forward had a multi-strand tether to avoid such problems. There are several approaches along those lines, yes... but they do complicate the design, especially for tethers that have to be conductive. Second, the effectiveness of electrodynamic tethers deteriorates rapidly as altitude rises, because both the strength of Earth's magnetic field and the density of the local plasma fall off quickly with altitude. This sounds like a show stopper! You would have to switch to M2P2 at some altitude I guess. Unfortunately, M2P2 probably isn't going to do much for you until you are outside Earth's magnetosphere, and certainly won't do much for you below synchronous altitude (below there, the magnetic field is moving slower than orbital speed, so passive interaction with it creates *drag* rather than thrust). And electrodynamic tethers have problems well before then. There is one possible escape hatch. By thrusting only at perigee, you can pump the apogee up to high altitudes, while keeping the perigee down low where the field is strong and the plasma dense. The trouble is that this takes a *long* time, far longer than continuous-thrust strategies. -- MOST launched 1015 EDT 30 June, separated 1046, | Henry Spencer first ground-station pass 1651, all nominal! | |
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(Karl Hallowell) wrote in message . com...
(Tony Rusi) wrote in message om... snip The re-entry of skylab, the salyuts, and mir seem to be such a waste, they too could have been placed at L1 and L5. Some words of caution here. They might be placed at L1 or L5, but I suspect that they would get in the way at a future date. That was the real reason they were deorbited in the first place. Note that L1 and L5 are well outside of Earth's magnetosphere (most of the time except when passing through the tail) so the shielding on these craft wouldn't be adequate for human survival. I just spent the last three years at Bigelow Aerospace refining the design of a flexible packable shield that you can add to the outside of any spacecraft or spacebase. |
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