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Japan To Launch Solar Sail Spacecraft "Ikaros"

separsons writes "On May 18th, Japan's Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) will launch Ikaros, a fuel-free spacecraft that relies completely on solar power. The spacecraft's 46-foot-wide sails are thinner than a human hair and lined with thin-film solar panels. After a rocket brings the craft to space, mission controllers on the ground will steer Ikaros by adjusting the sails' angles, ensuring optimal radiation is hitting the solar cells. If the mission proves successful, the $16M spacecraft will be the first solar sail-powered craft to enter deep space."

12 of 138 comments (clear)

  1. Icarus? by Kelson · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's always seemed like a bad idea to name anything after a figure whose claim to fame was that he ignored warnings against exceeding the tolerances of his vehicle, causing it to break up and kill him.

    1. Re:Icarus? by Gerafix · · Score: 5, Funny

      To be fair the Japanese don't have to do metric/imperial conversions so they should be fine.

  2. meh by jt418-93 · · Score: 4, Funny

    the bjorans did this centuries ago :)
    repeat

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    -.no
  3. Re:Thin sails by d1r3lnd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well yeah, but you could make it 100x thicker and all that debris whizzing around would still poke holes in it. This way, it's light enough to be a.) cheap to launch and b.) actually efficient enough at harnessing the solar "wind" to move its mass.

  4. Re:Thin sails by natehoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, I suspect that's an expectation, but if the materials are built right it'll have some rip-stop capability so it'll just make a hole. That will affect the solar sail, but not significantly until you get a lot of them.

    The alternative is to make something that is heavier and less effective, which will still get punctured if a bit of debris goes through it.

    After all, things in space are usually not moving very slowly in relation to each other, so anything that touches it is likely to go right through anyway, regardless of the material. I suppose with something like this, the less resistance the material puts up the less its course is going to be screwed up by a space rock.

    It's also relatively unlikely (though certainly not impossible) for them to have a strike in the first place. Look at how cluttered Low Earth Orbit is with Mankind's crap, and how many active satellites have ever been knocked out of commission by our own cesspool of concentrated garbage in LEO? Two that I recall, and they hit each other. I know there have been occasional stories about impacts, but they aren't terribly common, and the chances of them dwindle off rapidly past LEO and Mankind's junkyard.

    Plus, $16 million?!? for a deep space probe that requires no fuel? That's chicken feed in terms of space travel. The Japanese could probably mass-produce them for $12 million a pop or less given economies of scale, send 10 of them out in different directions, lose 8 of them to debris strikes and whatever, and STILL get better science longer than pretty much anything short of nuclear we could send up today.

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  5. Preparation by gmuslera · · Score: 4, Funny

    In the case it or one of its successors are launched to another solar system, i suggest that it carry scaled down versions of the ninja turtles, so if some come back to this mote in god's eye will never figure how we really are.

  6. Re:Thin sails by AikonMGB · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, you are right -- micrometeoroid impacts are definitely an issue that you have to deal with when you are using thin-membrane materials in space. Hopefully the engineers will design features called "rip stops" (among other names) into the sail to prevent tears from spreading through the sail. These are usually accomplished by putting a grid of perforations throughout the sail -- when a tear encounters one, the circular shape spreads the tensile stresses across the adjacent material, reducing the likelihood that the tear will propagate. This way a micrometeoroid impact won't ruin your entire sail, just the local grid element.

    There are probably other methods of implementing rip stops, but I haven't read any significant literature on them. Anything bigger than a micrometeoroid, and you have bigger problems -- but in this case, a traditional satellite would have just as big a problem.

    Aikon-

  7. Re:Where's it going? by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 4, Informative

    Anyone know where it's going? "Deep space" isn't much of an answer, as it includes everywhere that isn't Earth. Does it have a destination besides "away"? The article does not say...

    As far as I can tell, it's an experiment to test the propulsion system with no other purpose. Here's a slightly better article about it.

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    This ain't rocket surgery.
  8. Re:What could possibly go wrong? by RevWaldo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Possible outcomes:

    1) try > succeed > learn

    2) try > fail > learn

    Given the amazing low price tag for the mission, both are good outcomes.

  9. Re:Thin sails by yariv · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...harnessing the solar "wind" to move its mass.

    I guess you didn't mean this, but just to avoid confusion. There is something called "solar wind", charged particles ejected from the sun, it has nothing to do with this sail. The sail uses light pressure, the pressure of light emitted by the sun.

  10. Tachyon Eddy by wisnoskij · · Score: 4, Funny

    Now all we have to do is find a tachyon eddy and we could be on Cardasia in no time.

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  11. Is it just me or is Japan's space program awesome by BetterSense · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I haven't really payed much attention to Japan's space program in the past...heck I didn't really know they had a space program. But they recently landed a probe on an asteroid, and returned it to earth with asteroid rocks. When I read that it was like, "Oh. Japan has a space program, and they actually did something scientifically interesting". It seems like space programs are all about bitching about government funding and endlessly redesigning ancient rocket designs and speculating about manned missions to other planets, and meanwhile Japan went to an asteroid and brought back rocks. So when they say they are going to make this solar sail thing, I believe that they are going to make this solar sail thing.