Laser broom
A laser broom is a proposed ground-based laser beam-powered propulsion system whose purpose is to sweep space debris out of the path of other artificial satellites such as the International Space Station. It would heat one side of an object enough to change its orbit and make it hit the atmosphere sooner.
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Technical description
Lasers are designed to target debris between one and ten centimeters in diameter. Collisions with such debris are commonly of such high velocity that considerable damage and numerous secondary fragments are the result.[1] The laser broom is intended to be used at high enough power to penetrate through the atmosphere with enough remaining power to ablate material from the target.[2] The ablating material imparts a small thrust that lowers its orbital perigee into the upper atmosphere, thereby increasing drag so that its remaining orbital life is short.[3] The laser would operate in pulsed mode to avoid self-shielding of the target by the ablated plasma. The power levels of lasers in this concept are well below the power levels in concepts for more rapidly effective anti-satellite weapons.
Research into this area demonstrates the precise physics involved, which shows that space debris is re-entered regardless of the direction of laser illumination. Using a laser guide star and adaptive optics, a sufficiently large ground based laser (1 megajoule pulsed HF laser) can deorbit dozens of objects per day at reasonable cost.[4] This work was summarized in an article in Wired magazine.[5]
Applications and proposed project
The Space Shuttle routinely showed evidence of "tiny" impacts upon post-flight inspection.[6]
Project Orion was a proposed laser broom project estimated to cost $500 million in the 1990s.[7][8]
References
- Dr Sten Odenwald (1997). "Where can I get information about orbiting space junk?". Ask the Astronomer - Archive of Astronomy Questions and Answers. Astronomy Cafe. Retrieved 2007-03-26.
- Jonathan Campbell, "Using Lasers in Space: Laser Orbital Debris Removal and Asteroid Deflection", Occasional Paper No. 20, Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base, December 2000.
- Ivan Bekey, "Project Orion: Orbital Debris Removal Using Ground-Based Sensors and Lasers.", Second European Conference on Space Debris, 1997, ESA-SP 393, p. 699.
- Dr Claude Phipps (2011). "Removing Orbital Debris with Lasers". Advances in Space Research. 49: 1283–1300. arXiv:1110.3835. Bibcode:2012AdSpR..49.1283P. doi:10.1016/j.asr.2012.02.003.
- Adam Mann (2011). "Space Junk Crisis: Time to Bring in the Lasers". Space Junk Crisis: Time to Bring in the Lasers. Wired. Retrieved 2016-06-22.
- Weinstock, Maia (5 September 2000). "Orbiting Junk Continues to Threaten International Space Station". Space.com. Archived from the original on 2000-11-21. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
- Ivan Bekey (May 1997). "Orion's Laser: Hunting Space Debris". Aerospace America. AIAA. Retrieved 2011-05-08.
- "Satellite Smashers". Air & Space Magazine. March 1, 2008. Archived from the original on July 29, 2012. Retrieved August 18, 2011.
Further reading
- 2000 Earth Orbital Debris - NASA Research on Satellite and Spacecraft Effects by World Spaceflight News, CD-ROM: 862 pages ISBN 1-893472-28-0
External links
- BBC News report on Laser broom
- Space Station gets high tech broom ABC
- NASA Hopes Laser Broom Will Help Clean Up Space Debris Agence France-Presse story via SpaceDaily
- Orbiting Junk Continues to Threaten International Space Station Space.com
- Shuttle to test space junk broom New Scientist
- SpaceViews July 1997: Articles ORION: A Solution to the Orbital Debris Problem by Claude Phipps
- Wired October 2011: Space Junk Crisis: Time to Bring in the Lasers story on Wired
- Removing Orbital Debris with Pulsed Lasers