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NASA Funds Development of Novel Diffractive Solar Sails
by Staff Writers
Rochester NY (SPX) Apr 29, 2019

Professor Grover Swartzlander discussed his work on diffractive solar sails at the NASA Inventive Genius lecture series at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry in April. Credit: J. B. Spector Museum of Science and Industry

Scientists have been floating designs for solar sails to propel spacecraft for decades, but a new approach being developed by a Rochester Institute of Technology professor could be the key to helping spacecraft photograph the poles of the Sun for the first time.

NASA announced it is providing RIT Professor Grover Swartzlander a Phase II award through its NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program to explore the feasibility of diffractive solar sails over the next two years.

"We're embarking on a new age of space travel that makes use of solar radiation pressure on large, thin sail membranes," said Swartzlander. "The conventional idea for the last 100 years has been to use a reflective sail such as a metal coating on a thin polymer and you unfurl that in space, but you can get a force based on the law of diffraction as well.

In comparison to a reflective sail, we think a diffractive sail could be more efficient and could withstand the heat of the Sun better. These sails are transparent so they're not going to absorb a lot of heat from the Sun, and we won't have the heat management problem as you do with a metallic surface."

Swartzlander is developing the diffractive solar sails using optical films made from metamaterials, which are engineered to have properties not found in naturally occurring materials. This approach allows the sails to have a lower mass and substitutes mechanical navigation with electro-optic beam steering, which is more efficient and less prone to breakdowns.

Ultimately Swartzlander hopes to use these diffractive sails to put a constellation of satellites at various different orbits around the Sun to provide a 360-degree view of it. He estimates that it would take five years for spacecraft using diffractive solar sails to reach the poles of the Sun and hopes to see a demonstration mission within the next five years to see how the diffractive solar sails would perform in space.

"The National Academy of Sciences is continuously asking for more missions that will help understand the physics of the Sun, and this could be an important part of that," said Swartzlander.

Swartzlander conducted a nine-month Phase I NIAC study in 2018, which culminated in an incubator meeting in Washington, D.C., to create a roadmap for advancing metamaterial sails on low Earth-orbiting satellites called CubeSats.

Meanwhile, NASA's Near-Earth Asteroid Scout (NEA Scout) mission is expected to include the first use of a reflective solar sail in space. NEA Scout is a six-unit CubeSat that will fly into space on NASA's Orion spacecraft as part of Exploration Mission-1.


Related Links
Rochester Institute Of Technology
Space Technology News - Applications and Research


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UNH scientists find auroral 'speed bumps' are more complicated
Durham NH (SPX) Apr 24, 2019
Researchers at the University of New Hampshire Space Science Center find that "speed bumps" in space, which can slow down satellites orbiting closer to Earth, are more complex than originally thought. "We knew these satellites were hitting "speed bumps", or "upswellings", which cause them to slow down and drop in altitude," said Marc Lessard, a physicist at UNH. "But on this mission we were able to unlock some of the mystery around why this happens by discovering that the bumps are much more compl ... read more

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