| mang2004 |
2020-01-14 03:59 |
a+(j?_FyI Fly by light. A light sail using diffractive gratings, as depicted in this artist’s conception, generates sideways forces that could keep it aligned with a laser beam or allow it to be steered towards a target. xEoip?O?7F R$0U<(/ ;<6"JP>0 )h"Fla Bhuw(KeB Figure caption mx tgb$* XL"=vbD WM< \e E2:D(7(;l h%b hrkD Cg6;I.K To snap close-up photos of planets outside our Solar System (exoplanets), some researchers are proposing the use of a fleet of “light sails” propelled by powerful Earth-bound lasers. A new experiment has demonstrated a possible sail design that uses diffraction gratings, rather than the reflective mirrors that have been used in previous sail designs. The gratings deflect an incoming laser beam at an angle, creating a sideways force that keeps the sail aligned with the beam’s center. Further testing is needed, but the team developing the sail is hopeful that their “beam-rider” technology could guide probes to faraway stars or to closer targets in our own Solar System. z[#6-T
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U1\MA6pXW [\HQPo'S oI$V|D3 9 Chemically powered rockets continue to be the dominant form of space travel. However, venturing out of the Solar System will require more energy than chemical fuel propellants can supply. “Rockets have done just as much as they can do,” says Grover Swartzlander from Rochester Institute of Technology in New York. Light sails are one alternative, with the earliest proposals dating from the 19th century. The simplest idea is to deploy a large mirror that reflects sunlight. With such a sail, the force providing propulsion is small compared with that of conventional rockets, but the available energy is limitless. EVz9WY Y?!/>q [b`$\o'- u8uW9 < Both the Japanese space agency and NASA have flown light sail missions, and the privately funded Planetary Society is currently operating a light sail in orbit around Earth. “The technology is advancing,” Swartzlander says. In 2016, the Breakthrough Starshot project, which was founded by the late physicist Stephen Hawking and billionaires Yuri Milner and Mark Zuckerberg, announced a plan to send 1000 light sails carrying postage-stamp-sized cameras to Proxima b, the closest known exoplanet. To reach their target in 20 years, the sails would be accelerated to 20% of the speed of light by an array of lasers on Earth supplying 100 gigawatts of total power. -N^=@Yx) Uz>Yn&{y6 :uR>UDlPX 9/46%=& | |