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In the NewsSetting Sail for the CosmosSource: Jeffrey Kluger, "Setting Sail for the Cosmos," Time
Magazine , March 3, 2001 The first spacecraft to fly on sunbeams is set for launch next month. AS EVERY ANCIENT MARINER KNEW, traveling by sail is a simple way to go. Though the winds could be fickle and the boats pokey, the energy source that moved the ship was free, plentiful and renewable. Now the same technology that conquered the oceans of Earth may conquer the ocean of space. This week a Russian and American consortium will announce plans for an April launch of the first so-called solar-sail vehicle, a multimasted spacecraft that will use sunlight to push itself along. To a public raised on smoke-and-fire rocketry, the idea of drawing energy straight from space seems fanciful. To the people behind the new ship, however, the technology is not only sensible but inevitable, the easiest way to reinvent the business of cosmic travel. “This allows us to use very little fuel to fiji very great distances,” says Bud Schurmeier, a former NASA engineer and an adviser to the project. “It’s an intriguing concept.” The idea behind solar sailing is simple. Although light is made of massless
particles called photons, such ephemeral things exert real pressure, especially
when they flow NASA has a keen interest in solar sailing and has budgeted $5 million to
investigate 17 possible missions. It may select one as early as next month.
But while the space agency has been mulling plans, the people behind the new
ship, dubbed Cosmos 1, have been getting set to fly. The project is the brainchild
of Russia’s Babakin Space Center, near Moscow, and the Planetary Society
in Pasadena, Calif., a think tank founded in 1979 by astronomer Carl Sagan
and others. The two groups had long been developing plans for a solar-sail
mission but got the cash to make it happen only last year when Ann Druyan,
Sagan’s widow and head of the media company Cosmos Studios, and Joe
Firmage, the founder of USWeb, threw their names and about $4 million behind
the effort. “I had talked to people about solar sailing before,” says
Lou Friedman, former engineer at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena
and director of the Planetary Society, “but between the Russians’ capabilities
and Ann’s vision, I knew this one would click.” |
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