Light sail, er, sails....
Discussion
ash73 said:
Eric Mc said:
Can't the solar sail; "tack" as a normal sail would?
Tacking requires you to change course; you can boost the opposite side of the orbit by accelerating, or reduce it by decelerating, or change the path of the orbit by accelerating in a perpendicular direction (e.g. to switch from an equatorial to polar orbit) but that requires a huge amount of dV.In space everything is orbiting something (up to the scale of galaxy clusters); you can't just fly around.
RobM77 said:
Interesting question.. Tacking is only a feature of sailing craft that can sail in a different direction to the wind. Sailing boats manage this via resistance from their hull and keel - if the wind's coming from 12 o clock most sailing boats can sail in any direction from 2 o'clock round to 10 o'clock, so any direction between those, with the exception of a 'run' (6 o'clock) can be flipped - e.g. 90 degrees at 3 o'clock can be flipped to 9 o'clock, or 4 flipped to 10 etc. A solar sail powered craft in deep space would only be able to travel in the direction of a solar wind. However, gravity provides a different force on the craft, so in theory I guess, yes, depending on circumstances and proximity to gravitational fields. The presence of a solar wind does of course mean gravity as well!
I reckon it could be done, but it would be a lot more complex than an earth based yacht and there would be far more forces acting on the craft.ash73 said:
I guess you could do it by boosting the orbit one way, then waiting six months and boosting the other way when the Earth is on the other side of the Sun?
Presumably it gets moved perpendicular to the angle of the sail/mirror, so you should be able to get a reasonable angle on the sun and therefore be able to it in a fair bit less than 6 months.Zirconia said:
Righto.
Makes note to get back into Kerbal.
There's a mod for that Makes note to get back into Kerbal.
RobM77 said:
ash73 said:
Eric Mc said:
Can't the solar sail; "tack" as a normal sail would?
Tacking requires you to change course; you can boost the opposite side of the orbit by accelerating, or reduce it by decelerating, or change the path of the orbit by accelerating in a perpendicular direction (e.g. to switch from an equatorial to polar orbit) but that requires a huge amount of dV.In space everything is orbiting something (up to the scale of galaxy clusters); you can't just fly around.
Some years ago now I contributed to the crowdfunding of Lightsail 2. It was a long wait but made following the mission over the last few weeks very satisfying. Links have already been posted but here is another - the 'mission control' page updated with every pass over the control centre:
http://www.planetary.org/explore/projects/lightsai...
http://www.planetary.org/explore/projects/lightsai...
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