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Beyond the Solar System: A Challenge for Space Propulsion

Gregory L. Matloff

Year
1999
Citations
2

Abstract

Scientific exploration beyond the confines of our solar system has recently become a near-term goal for NASA. Early robotic probes beyond the Sun's heliopause [a few hundred Astronomical Units (AU) from the Sun] are planned for the first decade of the 21st century. A leading propulsion system for these early interstellar efforts is the solar sail unfurled as close to the Sun as possible. This report discusses the basic physics of the solar sail, the rationale for interstellar exploration, a recent materials breakthrough influencing solar-sail design concepts, and solar sail kinematics (for the case of sail unfurlment at perihelion from an initially parabolic solar orbit and sail orientation normal to the Sun). A number of possible mission scenarios to distances up to 1,000 AU are presented as is a short discussion of what we must learn to extend our exploratory reach to 10,000 AU.

Keywords

Solar sailSolar SystemAerospace engineeringPropulsionAstrobiologyAstronomyPhysicsHeliosphereSpace explorationEngineering

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