LCD 'Engine' For Spacecraft Attitude Control
Bruce Perens writes "Japan's IKAROS satellite, which earlier performed the first successful demonstration of a solar sail, has broken more new ground. Liquid-crystal displays — yes, like in your video monitor — were fabricated into strips on the edges of the solar sail. By energizing some of the LCDs and changing the reflective characteristics of parts of the sail from specular to diffuse, JAXA scientists successfully generated attitude control torque in the sail, changing the spacecraft's orientation."
"yes, like in your video monitor"
No, I have an old fashioned Sony CRT monitor.
My wife needs that just about every month.
It's neat to see this phenomenon being used for a spacecraft.
"The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games." - Eugene Jarvis
I like the cut of your space gib!
Come on, you have to admit that's a pretty clever design element.
Imagine if the entire sail surface could be selectively modulated in this way.
Parity: What to do when the weekend comes.
...beer
I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
I wonder what amount of torque they were able to develop with this? It seems like it was pretty effective.
Downwind faster than the solar wind!
With reasonable men I will reason; with humane men I will plead; but to tyrants I will give no quarter. -- William Lloyd
Neat. Anyone have an order-of-magnitude idea if this could be used for stationkeeping on sats in Earth orbit or for attitude control in deep space missions? Just wondering if it produces enough torque to control a real spacecraft. IIRC, for most spacecraft fuel for attitude control is the limiting factor on mission duration, and I think in some cases (e.g., Kepler) it's the only expendable. Could a spacecraft using this technique have virtually unlimited life? If you're solar powered and don't burn fuel, what limits lifetime-- dust on the solar arrays? Battery degradation?
Now if only they could equip the spacecraft with some sort of LCD Soundsystem.
Good for Japan. Too bad other countries are not collaborating and taking advantage of this advancement, or are they?
Tired of my customary (Score:1)
its getting hot here
I'm not the only one that sees an analogy to Daffy Duck blowing on his little sail to make his boat go, am I?
...
And I thought they only watched manga in Japan
but I'd rather hear and slEing or table members All over The mobo blew
... and changing the reflective characteristics of parts of the sail from specular to diffuse...
I knew it. They photoshopped it.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
LCD Engine not so much. LCD Rudder... yep that fits. Nevertheless it is darn impressive. It is great to see someone working with this technology.
all those guys with neon lights underneath their cars are actually on to something?
the reapers BSD's decl1ned in market
Crookes believed that his radiometer was turned by light pressure, but he was wrong! It's actually a phenomenon of low-pressure gas moving around a temperature differential. If you pump your radiometer down to a really good vaccumm, it stops working! The light pressure is not sufficient to conquer the bearing friction.
There's a good explanation in Wikipedia.
Bruce Perens.
IAARS (I Am A Rocket Scientist). If there are no fluid leaks anywhere, as there shouldn't be in a properly functioning spacecraft, then *all* of the torque that changes the attitude of a spacecraft comes from solar radiation pressure alone. Therefore there should be not much problem in controlling attitude by modulating solar radiation pressure.
As a matter of fact, this effect is already being used today in commercial satellites. Some of them have adjustable panels that can be turned so that the solar radiation torque is zeroed. The new idea here isn't using solar radiation for attitude control but using LCD panels to modulate the radiation pressure.
The problem in understanding how such a small pressure as solar radiation can cause a spacecraft to rotate is that we are used to thinking about things here on the earth surface, where there are many other forces around us. In orbit, the spacecraft is in free fall in a vacuum, there's no friction and no wind, it will move to the slightest impulse applied. A typical commercial geostationary satellite may need attitude maneuvers a few times a week.
Of a solar sail is rather neat. Problem is they can never accelerate outside of our solar system. Once they hit the termination shock that's it, no more power. I wonder if someone has done the math to see what the max theoretical speed they could reach is. Of course they could probably do more if they put the sail away, slingshot around Jupiter back close to the sun and deploy the sail again once they pass the sun.
The problem however is that the "sail" only works in one direction - "away from the sun". Unlike a sailboat which can sail at an angle to the wind because it has a keel and can therefore push back against the wind, the only thing a solar sail can do is spin on its axis. It cannot change direction on its own. And the pressure you get decreases dramatically with distance from the sun, too. Still, nice to know the concept works. I'm sure practical applications will be found. This is not a method of interstellar travel, however.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
I have a 32-inch LCD attitude control device in my living room. It's quite effective when houseguests start getting restless. The next logical step in this technology I think would be getting the spacecraft to respond to alcohol.
How about using computed holography driving embedded LCDs to make a light sail act as a sort of synthetic-aperture device? You could have multiple steerable beams, receive with multiple steerable reflections, etc.
Bruce Perens.
"Eat at Joe's"
Table-ized A.I.
Interesting! I didn't know a radiometer needed a partial instead of hard vacuum to work properly. I bought the "light pressure theory" as well. It makes sense—solar wind couldn't get through a glass bulb.
It seems to me the effect of the LCDs interacting with the solar wind would be pretty small, but it's a neat idea since there are no moving parts.
Ya learn something new every day.
"The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games." - Eugene Jarvis