NASA's Innovative Ion Space Thruster Sets Endurance World Record

Discussion in 'Latest US & World News' started by Mandrake, Sep 25, 2013.

  1. Mandrake

    Mandrake New Member

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    by Nola Taylor Redd, SPACE.com Contributor 6 hours ago

    http://news.yahoo.com/nasas-innovative-ion-space-thruster-sets-endurance-world-110945990.html

    A five-year test of NASA's latest ion drive for future spacecraft has set a new world record for the longest single space engine test.

    The space agency's Evolutionary Xenon Thruster (NEXT) project completed a continuous test the ion engine for more than 48,000 hours — over five and a half years — longer than any other space propulsion system ever tested. With low fuel weight and long-running efficiency, ion engines have become strong contenders for deep space missions.

    Spacecraft traveling through miles of space require energy to keep moving. Ion propulsion engines can help to minimize the bulkiness of fuel, allowing for increased scientific exploration in smaller packages. Over the course of nearly six years, NEXT consumed only 1,900 pounds (860 kilograms) of fuel, compared to the 22,000 pounds (10,000 kg) a conventional rocket would burn to create the same momentum. [Watch a video of NASA's Evolutionary Xenon Thruster in action]

    Part of a class of solar electric propulsion (SEP) engines, NEXT bombards xenon with electrons, ionizing it. The ionized propellant is then focused out the back of the engine, creating a stream of ion jets known as an ion beam. The movement creates the thrust that moves the craft.





    Ion engines win out over traditional engines much like the tortoise defeated the hare. Though it takes more time to speed up, it is able to run longer than its competition. Charged particles from NEXT reached speeds of up to 90,000 miles per hour (144,841 km/h), making it ideal for deep space missions in particular.

    "SEP uses electricity, generated by solar panels, to power an electric thruster to propel spacecraft," principle investigator Michael Patterson of NASA's Glenn Research Center said in a statement. "Because it reduces the amount of propellant needed for a given mission, it greatly reduces the weight of the vehicle."

    Less weight means less traditional propellant required to launch the craft into space — or more room for science. Ion engines on NASA's Dawn mission, which traveled to the asteroid Vesta and is now headed toward the dwarf planet Ceres, enabled its team to include more scientific equipment than they would have managed on a traditionally-powered craft.

    Once the staple of science fiction, ion propulsion engines have made a slow influx in military, commercial, and civilian space programs. An ion engine propelled NASA's Deep Space 1 mission, launched in October 1998, demonstrating the engine's long duration.

    "The bottom line in space is to maximize the payload we deliver including potential missions in support of human operations and scientific payload," Patterson said. "We don't want to spend all our resources pushing propellant around. NEXT can fly huge payloads deep into space with super fuel efficiency."

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    Awesome! Maybe we will be able to get off this rock sooner than later.
     
  2. 4thBattalion

    4thBattalion New Member

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    Mmmmm... What happens when the spacecraft leaves the solar system and is too far from the sun for its solar pannels to produce the needed electricity?
     
  3. TheBlackPearl

    TheBlackPearl New Member

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    I'm working on a "mass-drive" engine that would INVERT Einstein's theory of relativity like a sailboat moves forward by tacking into a head wind. It will require no fuel and travel at nearly infinite speeds. Anyone with money to invest who would like to get in on the ground floor of this tremendous opportunity can send me a PM.

    FYI I prayed on this and it is FULLY JESUS APPROVED! For your 1st $100 contribution I will send you a prayer shawl and a little Jesus rocket ship that you can move from place to place around the room each time you send me more "faith seed" money. Operators are standing by.
     
  4. Regular Joe

    Regular Joe Well-Known Member

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    Getting off of this rock has some really big problems. I had a chance to talk with 2 of the engineers who were working on the nuclear rocket at the Nevada test site. This thing could make 17,000 lbs. of thrust, and these guys were pretty sure that it would have become operational, with advances in material that have come from the fusion project. The real problem, and why the project was abandoned, is that there is just too much radiation in space.
    (The international Space Station is able to "hide behind" the Earth and moon, or it couldn't work).
    Until/unless we can find a way to shield people from that radiation in open space, even a Mars mission is impossible.
     

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