NASA working on laser technology that could send humans to Mars in 3 days!
New York: Space exploration has come a long way, but one thing that
is still holding humans back from interstellar travel is the speed of
the spacecraft.
With the current available technology,
it will approximately take humans five months to touch down on the Martian surface.
But, NASA scientists are currently working on a new laser technology that can take humans to Mars in flat three days.
NASA scientist Philip Lubin and his team are working on a system
where lasers propel spacecraft with giant sails to Mars in just three
days and this is no science fiction.
The new “photonic propulsion” system relies on the momentum of
photons - particles of light - to move forward. But instead of photons
from the Sun's rays, the design will involve a push by giant Earth-based
lasers to the spacecraft, sciencealert.com reported.
According to Lubin, the technology is very much readily available and that the system could easily be scaled up.
“There are recent advances that take this from science fiction to
science reality. There is no known reason why we cannot do this,” Lubin
was quoted as saying.
Despite not having any mass, particles of light have both energy and momentum.
“When they reflect off an object, that momentum is transferred into a
little push. With a large, reflective sail, it's possible to generate
enough momentum to gradually accelerate a spacecraft,” the report added.
Lubin's calculations predict that photonic propulsion could get a 100-kg robotic spacecraft to Mars in just three days.
“Electromagnetic acceleration is only limited by the speed of light
while chemical systems are limited to the energy of chemical processes,”
Lubin wrote.
NASA is currently building the Space Launch System (SLS), the world's most powerful rocket that will take humans to Mars.
SLS is one of the most experienced large rocket engines in the world,
with more than a million seconds of ground test and flight operations
time.
When completed, SLS will enable astronauts to begin their journey to explore destinations far into the solar system.
The SLS will carry 13 small satellites along with an uncrewed Orion spacecraft during its first flight in 2018.
US President Barak Obama has proposed $19 billion for the US space
agency in the fiscal 2017 budget - a little less that $19.3 billion NASA
received for the fiscal 2016.
Lubin and his team have received a proof-of-concept grant from NASA
to show that photonic propulsion could be used for space travel.
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