NASA Thruster Achieves World-Record Five-Plus Years of Operation
Hello
reader!
It
follows a note published on the day (06/26), in the site
"www.space-travel.com", stating that NASA Thruster achieves World-Record
Five-Plus years of operation.
Duda Falcão
ROCKET SCIENCE
NASA
Thruster Achieves World-Record
Five-Plus Years of
Operation
by Staff
Writers
Cleveland
OH (SPX) Jun 26, 2013
A
NASA advanced ion propulsion engine has successfully operated for more than 48,000
hours, or 5 and a half years, making it the longest test duration of any type
of space propulsion system demonstration project ever.
The
thruster was developed under NASA's Evolutionary Xenon Thruster (NEXT) Project
at NASA's Glenn Research Center in Cleveland. Glenn manufactured the test
engine's core ionization chamber. Aerojet Rocketdyne of Sacramento, Calif.,
designed and built the ion acceleration assembly.
The
7-kilowatt class thruster could be used in a wide range of science missions,
including deep space missions identified in NASA's Planetary Science Decadal
Survey.
"The
NEXT thruster operated for more than 48,000 hours," said Michael J.
Patterson, principal investigator for NEXT at Glenn. "We will voluntarily terminate
this test at the end of this month, with the thruster fully operational. Life
and performance have exceeded the requirements for any anticipated science
mission."
The
NEXT engine is a type of solar electric propulsion in which thruster systems use
the electricity generated by the spacecraft's solar panel to accelerate the
xenon propellant to speeds of up to 90,000 mph. This provides a dramatic
improvement in performance compared to conventional chemical rocket engines.
During
the endurance test performed in a high vacuum test chamber at Glenn, the engine
consumed about 1,918 pounds (870 kilograms) of xenon propellant, providing an
amount of total impulse that would take more than 22,000 (10,000 kilograms) of
conventional rocket propellant for comparable applications.
"Aerojet
Rocketdyne fully supports NASA's vision to develop high power solar electric
propulsion for future exploration," said Julie Van Kleeck, Aerojet
Rocketdyne's vice president for space advanced programs. "NASA-developed
next generation high power solar electric propulsion systems will enhance our
nation's ability to perform future science and human exploration
missions."
The
NEXT project is a technology development effort led by Glenn to develop a next
generation electric propulsion system, including power processing, propellant
management and other components. The project, conducted under the In-Space
Propulsion Technology Program at Glenn, is managed by NASA's Science Mission
Directorate in Washington.
Fonte: Site www.space-travel.com
Comentário: Pois é leitor, é como temos divulgado, a
Propulsão Iônica é uma das mais promissoras tecnologias para substituir a Propulsão
Química, tanto em missões robóticas através do sistema solar, como também em
missões tripuladas, e creio que essa notícia seja do interesse do grupo liderado
pelo Dr. Gilberto Marrega Sandonato, do Laboratório Associado de Plasma (LAP) do INPE, como também para o
grupo liderado pelo Prof. Dr. José Leonardo Ferreira, do Laboratório de Plasma
do Instituto de Física da Universidade de Brasília (UnB), grupos
que trabalham com a Propulsão Iônica no Brasil.
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