NEXT Provides Lasting Propulsion and High Speeds for Deep Space Missions
Hello
reader!
It
follows a note published on the day (09/23), in the site
"www.space-travel.com", highlighting the NASA Evolutionary Xenon Thruster
(NEXT) provides propulsion lasting and high speed for Deep Space Missions.
Duda Falcão
ROCKET SCIENCE
NEXT Provides Lasting Propulsion
and High
Speeds for Deep Space Missions
by Nancy
Smith Kilkenny for Glenn Research Center
Cleveland OH (SPX) Sep 23, 2013
Ion propulsion used to exist only in the imagination of science fiction
writers. But after years of research and development NASA is poised to equip
some of its most important deep space missions with ion engines that can nudge
spacecraft using charged particles accelerated to blistering speeds of up to
90,000 miles per hour. And in the vastness of space, those engines need to push
continuously for years.
NASA's Evolutionary Xenon Thruster (NEXT) project, managed at NASA's
Glenn Research Center, has completed a test that powered the ion engine for
over 48,000 hours. That's five and a half years of thruster operation, making
it the longest duration test of any space propulsion system in history.
What makes this milestone truly amazing is how little fuel it used. NEXT
consumed 860 kg of xenon propellant. A conventional rocket would require 10,000
kg of propellant to provide the same amount of total momentum. By providing
low, constant thrust over long periods of time, electric propulsion engines
such as NEXT can accelerate spacecraft using less than a tenth of the
propellant of a chemical rocket.
To bring this into perspective, compare the young hot rod driver with a
little old lady. The hot rod speedster slams on the accelerator burning up fuel
quickly and then cruises after getting up to speed.
The old lady continuously pushes on the gas pedal ever so gently, slowly
increasing the speed of the car. Considering the distances in space, the old
lady will eventually surpass the hot rod and travel deeper into space on less
fuel.
NEXT is part of a class of solar electric propulsion (SEP) engines. How
does it work? "SEP uses electricity, generated by solar panels, to power
an electric thruster to propel spacecraft," says Michael Patterson,
principal investigator. "Because it reduces the amount of propellant
needed for a given mission, it greatly reduces the weight of the vehicle."
Therefore, mission planners can either reduce the size of the launch
vehicle needed or they can carry larger payloads for a greater science return.
"The bottom line in space is to maximize the payload we deliver
including potential missions in support of human operations and scientific
payload," says Patterson. "We don't want to spend all our resources
pushing propellant around. NEXT can fly huge payloads deep into space with
super fuel efficiency."
While NEXT represents a new, more robust capability for longer duration
deep space missions, ion propulsion engines have been operating in space for
many years in commercial, military and civil applications
Fonte: Site www.space-travel.com
Comentário: Pois é leitor, trago essa notícia por achar
que a mesma pode ser de interesse dos grupos que trabalham com a propulsão iônica
no Brasil, ou seja, o Grupo do Prof. Dr. José Leonardo
Ferreira da Universidade de Brasília (UnB), e o grupo Dr. Gilberto Marrega
Sandonato, pesquisador do Laboratório
Associado de Plasma (LAP), do Centro
de Tecnologias Especiais (CTE), do Instituto
Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE), que inclusive foi entrevistado pelo
blog recentemente. (veja aqui). Infelizmente até o momento não consegui contato
com o Dr. José Leonardo Ferreira como gostaria, para assim poder entrevistá-lo sobre
as suas atividades nessa importante fronteira na área de propulsão espacial.
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