WASHINGTON -- Traveling
light today? That takes on new meaning given upcoming tests of small laser-propelled
craft that zip through the sky on pulses of light.
These research flights are
setting the stage for future launches of ultra-tiny
satellites into low Earth orbit. Ultimately, human-carrying spacecraft
may be boosted into space via lasers.
NASA and the U.S. Air Force
are slated to launch laser-propelled vehicles, dubbed "Lightcraft", in
mid August. The series of tests will take place at the White
Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.
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| A model of the lightcraft.
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The Army’s 10-kilowatt,
pulsed-carbon-dioxide laser is on deck to send Lightcraft high over the
desert scenery. Lightcraft fly atop a beam of laser light, harnessing its
energy and converting it into propulsive thrust.
The laser energy strikes
a parabolic condensing reflector mounted on the bottom of the Lightcraft.
This area is lined with a thin coat of propellant. Struck by laser pulses,
the propellant detonates and thrusts the Lightcraft upward.
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| A model of the
Lightcraft is sent flying in the lab. |
Lightcraft come in various
designs, but weigh around an ounce or two (28 to 56 grams) and measure
just a few inches (centimeters) across.
Arguably, a Lightcraft looks
like a cross between a giant acorn and a highly polished hubcap stolen
off a car of tomorrow.
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Test time
Lightcraft have already
accumulated significant air time.
"We did our first test in
July 1996. So we’ve been at this for about four years," said Franklin Mead,
project manager, for the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Propulsion Directorate
at Edwards Air Force Base, California.
"There’s a lot of historical
aspects to this work. We’ve done things that nobody else has ever done,"
Mead told SPACE.com.
Over 140 flights of the
saucer-sized disks have been completed to date. The highest altitude reached
by a Lightcraft has been 128 feet (39 meters), a record set nearly a year
ago last July.
Lightcraft flights last
only seconds. As the vehicle rides on the light beam, it smacks into a
black-painted plywood board that is positioned over the test site.
Mead said a goal of the
next tests is setting a new record.
"We’re trying to attempt
something on the order of 1,000 feet (305 meters)," Mead said. Gone will
be the backstop, with the Lightcraft, hopefully, speeding past its current
altitude record, he said.
The new series of open-air
tests is being coordinated with the Air Force Space Command, which keeps
track of Earth-orbiting spacecraft. Bursts of laser light will be timed
so as not to blind sensors on satellites that are passing over New Mexico,
Mead said.
On the beam
Mead said another possible
goal for the upcoming flights is routing the laser beam on the ground from
one set of optical gear to another while the Lightcraft is in flight.
By handing off the light
beam to successively larger optics, the laser energy hitting the Lightcraft
can be sharply focused while the vehicle climbs higher and higher. In essence,
these "beam directors" act like stages of a rocket, needed to hurl a payload
toward space.
"Flipping the beam around
is likely a technique needed for launching Lightcraft into low Earth orbit,"
Mead said. "It’s more a laser-learning experience than it is a Lightcraft
experience," Mead said.
Great progress has been
made over the last few years in launching Lightcraft, said Leik Myrabo,
chief executive officer of Lightcraft Technologies, Inc., Bennington, Vermont.
He has doggedly pursued
laser-propulsion ideas since the late 1960s, working with both the Air
Force and NASA.
Myrabo is also a professor
of engineering physics at Rensselear Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New
York.
Putting on the power!
Myrabo’s novel Lightcraft
design work has proven that it is possible to send a small satellite weighing
just a few pounds into orbit via laser propulsion.
But reaching a 1,000 feet
is a far cry from beam blasting a satellite into orbit.
Myrabo quickly points out
that the Lightcraft flights are a 21st-century equivalent of step-by-step
experiments done by American rocket pioneer, Robert Goddard, starting in
the late 1920s. Goddard built and flew the first liquid-fueled rockets
nearly 75 years ago.
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Riding a guide-wire,
the test Lightcraft shoots forward, powered by light.
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"We know we need 10 times
the laser power, so we can fly to the edge of space. That’s the kind of
trajectory taken by sounding rockets that go up to suborbital heights,"
he said.
Jointly funding the Lightcraft
test program with the Air Force is NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center
in Huntsville, Alabama.
"We could be launching nano-
or microsatellites into orbit within five years, given sufficient funding,"
said Sandy Kirkindall, leader for advanced systems and for laser propulsion
at Marshall.
Kirkindall said that the
10-kilowatt laser now used could launch a Lightcraft that weights about
as much as an empty coke can. More funds are needed to upgrade that laser
by a factor of 10. It could then crank out as much as 150 kilowatts of
energy, he said.
"With that upgraded laser
we can boost things to the edge of space," Kirkindall said.
The big push
NASA and Air Force studies
indicate that about a megawatt of laser power could toss a microsatellite
weighing around a kilogram into orbit. Given more megawatts, heavier payloads
can be heaved spaceward, Kirkindall said.
Work underway on miniature
devices, such as tiny thrusters, gyroscopes and sensors, are giving rise
to a whole new breed of spacecraft -- nanosatellites.
"Work in that area looks
right on schedule, and would mesh about the right time with laser-propulsion
work," Kirkindall said.
In the future, he envisions
rapid firing of nanosatellites by laser, one after another.
"Get range clearance. Fuel
it up. Put it on the launch stand. Fire up the laser. Boom, you’re out
of there," Kirkindall said.
"I don’t see any showstoppers.
It’s demanding, but I don’t see anything that you have to build out of
‘unobtainium’," Kirkindall said.
Light on money
While the next test series
is meant to fine-tune laser-light-beam-propulsion concepts, finding funds
to keep up the work is more a walk in the dark.
NASA’s total budget for
laser propulsion is $100,000 dollars. Air Force monies for the joint work
are meager as well.
NASA’s Kirkindall, along
with Mead of the Air Force, both say future progress in laser propulsion
"is a matter of money."
"Funds are minuscule. They
are extremely meager," adds John Cole, NASA’s manager of the space transportation
research project office at Marshall Space Flight Center.
"Beamed energy is one of
the avenues we’ve got if we’re ever going to get the cost of access to
space down," Cole said.
Cole sees a 21st century
where passenger-carrying space vehicles might be powered upward on laser
light. That laser would churn out 100 gigawatts of power, he admits.
"That’s 10,000 times bigger
than any laser that’s been built. But, hey, I’ll take whatever works,"
Cole said.