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NASA's NEXT Ion Thruster Runs Five and a Half Years Nonstop To Set New Record

cylonlover writes "Last December, NASA's Evolutionary Xenon Thruster (NEXT) passed 43,000 hours of operation. But the advanced ion propulsion engine wasn't finished. On Monday, NASA announced that it has now operated for 48,000 hours, or five and a half years, setting a record for the longest test duration of any type of space propulsion system that will be hard to beat."

9 of 184 comments (clear)

  1. Perfect analogy for NASA by Gothmolly · · Score: 5, Funny

    Running your engines at full power but standing in one spot for 5 years. That pretty much sums up our space program since Apollo.

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    1. Re:Perfect analogy for NASA by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So then those rovers on Mars are figments of my imagination?

      Our space program since Apollo has gotten better. Unless you think their is some scientific value in sending humans to play golf on other worlds.

    2. Re:Perfect analogy for NASA by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Informative

      Would it be insufferably pedantic to mention Pioneer 10/11, Explorer 49, Mariner 10, Helios A/B(with Germany), Viking 1 and 2, Voyager 1 and 2, Pioneer Venus 1 and 2, ISEE-3(with EU), Magellan, Galileo, Hubble(with EU), Ulysses(with EU), Mars Observer, Clementine, WIND, NEAR Shoemaker, Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Pathfinder, ACE, Cassini-Huygens(with EU), Lunar Prospector, DS1, Stardust, Mars Odyssey, Genesis, Mars Exploration Rovers, MESSENGER, Deep Impact, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, New Horizons(in transit), STEREO, Pheonix, Dawn, Lunar Reconnaisance Orbiter, Solar Dynamics Observatory, Juno, GRAIL, Mars Science Laboratory, and Radiation Belt Storm Probes?

      Sure, our man-in-a-can cred isn't what it used to be; but I, for one, welcome our robotic overlords.

    3. Re:Perfect analogy for NASA by Penguinisto · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Our space program since Apollo has gotten better. Unless you think their is some scientific value in sending humans to play golf on other worlds.

      Laugh and minimize all you want, but the one geologist to land on the Moon managed to learn more (and faster) in his one short trip than all of the Mars rovers combined. Why, you ask? Because he didn't have to waste time looking at a picture and speculating on what a shadow or shape looked like it could be. Instead, he just walked up to an item of interest, looked at it, and was able to discern in seconds something that, well, takes teams of scientists weeks on end to speculate over nowadays.

      ...then there's that niggling fact that someday, space may be the only habitable home we have left after this one gets wrecked - be it by us or by the first asteroid that decides not to simply pass by. It would be nice to already have the tech to live there - preferably long before we're forced to learn it on a tight schedule.

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    4. Re:Perfect analogy for NASA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      ...then there's that niggling fact that someday, space may be the only habitable home we have left after this one gets wrecked

      Don't take offense, because I'm sure you're thinking this because you've been told so many times that this would be the case, but why is there the common belief that mankind would find a complete vacuum, devoid of ANY resources other than photons, be more suitable for our life than the Earth would be in any state of pollutive decay?

      If we can build capsules for space, why not do the same thing here and protect ourselves from the elements? We can use space suits to travel around the exterior here, too, extracting useful resources from the fetid scum we created, and if we can shield ourselves from cosmic radiation, why wouldn't we be able to shield ourselves from any possible post-nuclear-holocaust radiation?

      I'm certainly not suggesting that NASA is a waste of money - I am an aerospace engineer, after all - I'm just saying that if your house became infested with termites, you wouldn't resign yourself to abandoning it and living on a houseboat in the middle of the ocean because there are no termites in the middle of the ocean.

  2. Specific impulse by abies · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wonder if they had felt a specific impulse to switch it off?

    1. Re:Specific impulse by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nah. The lead scientist felt it was ok to let it run as long as they kept a close ion it.

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  3. Fools! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Running that engine for 5 years attached to the planet already caused a diversion of 0.01 on the orbit we have around the sun! That's why the sudden global warming! Tin foil ionic hat

  4. 1G of thust - you're gonna need a bigger boat by Overzeetop · · Score: 5, Informative

    1G of thrust would require, as you mentioned, almost 10m/s2 of acceleration, or your mass x 10 in Newtons.

    NEXT produces 236 mN of thrust at 7kW of power

    A typical terrestrial nuclear power plant will produce about 1 GW of power, or enough to power 143,000 of these engines. That would result in 33,700 Newtons of thrust, able to accelerate a spacecraft at 1G weighing 3433kg.

    To put that into perspective, those (143,000) engines would burn 2860kg/hr in fuel alone.

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