Santa Fe New Mexican

Lightsail 2 unfurls next step to space travel on solar winds

- By Shannon Stirone New York Times

The ability to sail across the cosmos, powered by the energy of the sun, is finally becoming a reality.

Engineers in California pressed a button Tuesday that unfurled the sails on a satellite that can be steered around Earth, advancing long-held hopes for an inexhausti­ble form of spacefligh­t and expanding the possibilit­ies for navigating the voids between worlds.

For centuries, it was only a dream: traveling through space propelled by the solar wind. It was first imagined in the 1600s by Johannes Kepler, the German astronomer who described the laws of the planets’ orbits. In 1964, Arthur C. Clarke moved it into the realm of science fiction in Sunjammer, a short story. Carl Sagan, the cosmologis­t, believed it could be more than a speculativ­e fantasy and in the 1970s began promoting the building of solar sails for space exploratio­n.

After 10 years of planning and more than 40,000 private donations worth $7 million, that idea took flight Tuesday, as LightSail 2, a spacecraft built for the Planetary Society, co-founded by Sagan, began what its creators hope will be a year of sailing around Earth.

“This is still one of the most feasible pathways to have real interstell­ar space travel in the future,” said Sasha Sagan, a writer as well as the daughter of the astronomer.

If it succeeds in its mission, it will contribute to overcoming one of the greatest limitation­s on the outer bounds of space travel — that the power that steers spacecraft, usually hydrazine fuel, eventually runs out.

In contrast, the sun is a source of constant energy. It is always releasing photons into space. While these particles don’t have mass, they have momentum. Solar sailing relies on the ever so gentle nudge of photons to push a sail forward, moving whatever is attached to the sail in the desired direction.

Other fuel sources, such as solar power and ion propulsion, can power spacecraft for decades, but solar sailing could eliminate the need for fuel altogether.

“There is a limitless supply of solar pressure,” said Dave Spencer, an aeronautic­s professor at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., and LightSail’s mission manager.

Sailing could be one of the most fuel-efficient options for space travel. While the force exerted on a solar sail is about the same as what you might feel from the weight of a piece of paper in the palm of your hand, the momentum is able to build, increasing the speed of the sail over time.

For example, NASA’s twin Voyager spacecraft, flying on pure momentum since they ran out of fuel, needed more thawn 40 years from launch to reach the interstell­ar medium. But if they had been powered by solar sails, their trips could have been completed in just over half that time.

Japan’s space agency, JAXA, experiment­ed in 2010 with the first solar sail spacecraft, Ikaros. That probe traveled past Venus but lacked mechanisms for steering. It is orbiting the sun and was last heard from in 2015.

NASA is also experiment­ing with the technology. Early in the next decade, it plans to launch Near Earth Asteroid Scout. That small cubesat will use a solar sail to visit and study an asteroid.

For now, space agencies will be watching the performanc­e of LightSail 2, a cubesat that is about the size of a loaf of bread.

The spacecraft was launched last month by a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket and has since been orbiting Earth while its managers on the ground prepared to unfurl its sails like a space-lotus.

At 11:40 a.m. in California, 12:40 p.m. Mountain time, the mission’s managers sent an order to orbit and received readings indicating that LightSail 2 had successful­ly unfurled its sails.

“I’m really excited, things went just perfectly,” Spencer said.

During the deployment, two wide-angle cameras on the cubesat were to capture 32 images. “It will effectivel­y give us a kind of movie of the sail deployment,” Spencer said.

LightSail 2 is the first steerable solar sail ever launched into orbit around Earth. Its solar sail is about the size of a boxing ring and made from a thin Mylar material. It blossomed Tuesday and began to collect the sun’s energy.

 ?? JOSH SPRADLING/THE PLANETARY SOCIETY VIA NEW YORK TIMES ?? An artist’s concept of LightSail 2 above Earth. The Planetary Society is attempting to deploy LightSail 2 and further demonstrat­e the potential for solar sailing for space travel.
JOSH SPRADLING/THE PLANETARY SOCIETY VIA NEW YORK TIMES An artist’s concept of LightSail 2 above Earth. The Planetary Society is attempting to deploy LightSail 2 and further demonstrat­e the potential for solar sailing for space travel.

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