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Headline:  Sailing through space on a plasma beam

Byline:  Peter N. Spotts Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
Date: 12/02/2004

(SEATTLE)Sitting in the cramped coach section of a transcontinental airliner for
five or six hours can be trying enough. But consider NASA's "reference
mission" to Mars. Astronauts will be cooped up in their craft for up to
six months each way as they travel to and from the Red Planet.

Robert Winglee and his colleagues would like to give these future
explorers a break. Inspired by the sun's influence on Earth, the team
is developing a unique approach to space propulsion. The craft it
envisions hurtles through space on sails made of magnetic fields. The
sails billow under pressure from the solar "wind" - electrically
charged particles from the sun - or from intense man-made plasma beams,
which special satellites would aim at the sails.

These approaches could slash the travel time to Mars from roughly six
months each way to 40 days, reckons the group, led by Dr. Winglee,
director of the University of Washington's Research Institute for Space
Exploration. An unmanned mission to the edge of the solar system itself
could be slashed from roughly 40 years to a decade or so.

Winglee says that an 80-day round trip makes it possible to design a
Mars mission that would last 90 days, instead of the 950 days that the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration uses as its reference or
base line for planning. A shorter mission increases its chances of
success. "A lot of the technologies we need already exist," he says.
"We're just trying to pull them together into something special."

The effort is part of a broader research program NASA is sponsoring
through its Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) in Atlanta. The
institute is a kind of "skunk works" for the agency, fostering space
technologies that won't fly any time soon. In fact, "the enabling
technologies may not be available today and the science may not be
completely understood," says director Robert Cassanova. But the ideas
are conceptually sound, he continues, and hold the promise of
revolutionizing space travel over the next 10 to 40 years.

For Winglee - as well as for others working on space propulsion ideas
ranging from space elevators and tethers to antimatter engines - the
challenge is to overcome the limits imposed by current chemical rockets.

The basic idea behind rocket motors hasn't changed much in the
millennium since a pair of Chinese inventors cobbled together the first
gunpowder rocket. Modern rockets are tubes loaded with fuel. They sport
a motor at one end and a relatively small payload at the other.

In the future, this approach will remain useful for boosting payloads
to altitudes where space tethers that look like ferris wheels can grab
them and fling them farther, Dr. Cassanova notes. But for routine
travel beyond Earth orbit, chemical propulsion grows increasingly
impractical. Compared with other techniques, it doesn't give much push
for the amount of weight it adds to a spacecraft.

In recent years, NASA has developed a more potent alternative - the
ion-drive motor. It flew successfully on the Deep Space 1 mission. The
European Space Agency used a similar approach on its SMART-1 lunar
orbiter, which this month completed its first orbit around the moon.

But these still leave the burden of propulsion with the spacecraft.

Winglee's team hopes to change that equation by mimicking nature -
particularly the way hot, electrically charged gases, or plasma, from
the sun interact with Earth's magnetic field. The goal is to allow
astronauts to travel in smaller, lighter spacecraft, or to ensure that
more of a vehicle's volume is taken up with exploration gear instead of
fuel tanks.

For years, researchers have been working on the idea of capturing this
solar wind in reflective "sails" made of thin material such as mylar.
The advantage: the push on the sail occurs continuously, allowing a
craft to build speed to levels unattainable with today's chemical
rockets.

In March, the Planetary Society, a space- exploration advocacy group,
plans to launch Cosmos 1, which will test the concept. The mission will
be launched from a converted Russian missile submarine.

But Winglee and his colleagues reckon that just as the solar wind
exerts pressure on Earth's magnetic field, it could do the same for a
spacecraft that makes its own magnetic field - turning it into a
magnetic sail. Others, such as Robert Zubrin, of Pioneer Astronautics
in Lakewood, Colo., have developed a concept for magnetic sails that
relies on superconducting magnets to generate the fields. Winglee's
group has taken the idea of a magnetic sail a step further with a craft
that generates its own plasma. By injecting this plasma into the
craft's magnetic field, the field would expand, making the system more
efficient.

The team's initial concept involved using the system passively, just as
a mylar solar sail would be used. But in developing the lab equipment
to test the concept, the team recognized that the plasma "wind" could
be provided artificially, through satellites that generate plasma
beams. Dubbed MagBeam, the approach would be particularly well suited
to traveling to and from other planets, they say. The satellites
providing the beams could themselves draw energy from the sun, if close
enough, or from small nuclear sources if they were placed in orbit
around the outer planets.

The satellite would aim its beam at the spacecraft, which orbits
nearby. As it travels, the beam generates its own magnetic field. As
the beam nears the craft, its magnetic field couples with the field the
craft itself generates, ensuring that the beam will remain "locked" on
the craft for as long as necessary to build the needed velocity. The
process could be reversed for braking.

Armed with a new pot of money from NIAC, announced last month, the goal
now, Winglee says, is "to prove the approach in the lab and develop the
scaling arguments" that will gauge the feasibility of building
prototypes.

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