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Propellant-Free Space Propulsion Technology Marks Critical Milestone At NASA
Science Daily ^ | 2-5-02 | Editorial Staff

Posted on 02/05/2002 5:49:22 AM PST by vannrox

Source:   NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center (http://www.msfc.nasa.gov/)
Date:   Posted 2/5/2002

Propellant-Free Space Propulsion Technology Marks Critical Milestone At NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center Propellant-free propulsion technology has taken a critical step toward reality, completing a series of systems tests at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.

The Propulsive Small Expendable Deployer system – called ProSEDS – is a tether-based propulsion experiment that draws power from the space environment around Earth, allowing the transfer of energy from the Earth to the spacecraft.

Inexpensive and reusable, ProSEDS technology has the potential to turn orbiting, in-space tethers into "space tugboats" -- replacing heavy, costly, traditional chemical propulsion and enabling a variety of space-based missions, such as the fuel-free raising and lowering of satellite orbits.

The initial flight of ProSEDS, scheduled for early summer, will mark the first time a tether system is used for propulsion. To be launched from Kennedy Space Center, Fla., ProSEDS will fly aboard an Air Force Delta II rocket and demonstrate an electrodynamic tether's ability to generate significant thrust.

"We achieved an important milestone with our tests in November," said ProSEDS project manager Leslie Curtis of the Marshall Center's Space Transportation Directorate. "Using a vacuum chamber to represent the space environment, we successfully simulated the first 16 hours of the experiment's initial flight."

In orbit, ProSEDS will deploy from a Delta-II second stage a 3.1-mile-long (5 kilometers), ultra-thin bare-wire tether connected with a 6.2-mile-long (10 kilometers) non-conducting tether. The interaction of the bare-wire tether with the Earth's ionosphere will produce thrust, thus lowering the altitude of the stage.

Although the mission could last as long as three weeks, the first day is the most critical, because the primary objective of demonstrating thrust with the tether should be achieved during the experiment's first 24 hours.

During the mission profile tests last November, engineers from the Marshall Center, along with their partners in academia and industry, tested the experiment's multiple systems as if the flight were actually taking place.

"We took ProSEDS through every step of the mission's first 16 hours," Curtis said. "We operated its hardware, batteries, cables and software, activated and deactivated systems, and collected and transmitted data as we would during an actual flight."

During the tests, all subsystems functioned as designed, including the hollow cathode plasma contactor, a critical component that enables the tether system to complete its electrical circuit.

During the flight, the process of collecting energy will begin when the electromagnetic portion of the tether collects electrical current along the tether's length as it moves through the Earth's magnetic field. To keep the current flowing, the plasma contactor reconnects the electrons with the invisible, electrically charged plasma that surrounds the Earth, emitting the electrons back into space so it can complete its circuit.

"We were pleased to see the plasma contactor perform well throughout the test, even under conditions outside its expected operating range," said Curtis. "It demonstrated the robustness of its design and the performance range of the ProSEDS operating system." The contactor was designed and built by the Electric Propulsion Laboratory in Monument, Colo.

Additional testing of ProSEDS hardware leading to its launch will include thermal testing, tether deployment and final system verification with flight software.

NASA's industry team for the ProSEDS experiment includes the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Alpha Technologies of Huntsville, Ala., Electric Propulsion Laboratory of Monument Colo., the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, Mass., Tether Applications Inc. of Chula Vista, Calif., and Triton Systems Inc. in Chelmsford, Mass.

The ProSEDS experiment is managed by the Space Transportation Directorate at the Marshall Center.

Editor's Note: The original news release can be found at http://www1.msfc.nasa.gov/NEWSROOM/news/releases/2002/02-017.html


Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center for journalists and other members of the public. If you wish to quote from any part of this story, please credit NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center as the original source. You may also wish to include the following link in any citation:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/02/020205080246.htm



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: space
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To: No Truce With Kings
Same principal as the "Everlasting Flashlight" advertised on TV. The Faraday effect occurs when coils and stators interact to create current flow. The flashlight stores the energy in an inductive or capacative device and voila light with no batteries.

$19.95 plus shipping and handling and you too can generate EMP. Electro motive propulsion!!!!

41 posted on 02/25/2005 7:20:14 AM PST by Young Werther
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To: boris
Kinda makes you wonder if NASA really did go to the moon in 1969.

Definitely a Stupid Propulsion Trick.....but Green Peace NASA probably likes the Environmentally-Friendly approach.

I say launch some nuclear propulsion experiments...Oh, the humanity!

42 posted on 02/25/2005 7:29:59 AM PST by add925 (The Left = Xenophobes in Denial)
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To: vannrox

This should work just fine for stationkeeping.


43 posted on 02/25/2005 9:04:48 AM PST by RightWhale (Please correct if cosmic balance requires.)
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To: boris

" Same with tethers. They are only "momentum transfer" devices, providing modest increases in velocity which is given to the payload at the tether's expense...ultimately paid by a small dimunition of the Earth's momentum.

Neither technology will work for boosters or deep-space propulsion. In this sense they are just stupid stunts."

What of rotating tethers?

Wouldn't 1000km or so long rotating tethers be useful for making substantial changes in direction and velocity?

Couldn't rotating tethers in various orbits transfer payloads between each other such that a paylod could get from low earth orbit to escape orbit and back to LEO with a net conservation of momentum?


44 posted on 02/25/2005 3:04:42 PM PST by UnChained
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To: KevinDavis

I hope this time they put a 'fisherman' in charge of design, so that they remember to weight the end of the tether to get it to unreel sucessfully, rather than ball and knot up like the previous fiascos.


45 posted on 02/25/2005 4:48:00 PM PST by XBob (Free-traitors steal our jobs for their profit.)
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To: vannrox
NASA is only about 8 years behind the commercial (Tether Applications)/academic (UAH SEDS) sector that used a tether to deploy a small satellite (SEDSAT-1) from a Delta II upper stage in 1998.

http://www.tetherapplications.com/seds1.htm

http://www.seds.org/sedsat

http://www.astronautix.com/craft/sedsat.htm

http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/sedsat.htm

46 posted on 02/26/2005 9:04:38 PM PST by anymouse
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