https://www.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2:1979144

*Authors*
Harun Gürhan, Signe Svensson, Emre Kizilirmak

*Abstract*
Mitigating global warming is one of the most pressing challenges of our
time. One temporary solution is the implementation of space sunshades. An
early proposal of a sunshade to limit solar radiation was given by James T.
Early in 1989. The implementation methods are numerous, but one specific
solution that could be possible to implement is a diffractive sunshade
considered by Bourge and Hein [1]. These sunshades have considerably lower
mass than alternatives like solar sails. Moving the sunshade closer to
Earth reduces its required area, and therefore its structural mass. The aim
of this study is to further reduce the mass by moving the sunshades from
their natural equilibrium points, the so-called sub-Lagrangian L′1, to
orbits around artificial equilibrium points. This is accomplished by adding
constant thrust using electric propulsion, so while the dry mass may
decrease, the mass for fuel increases. Numerical costs for station-keeping
are added to analytical calculations for displacement acceleration to find
locations where the overall mass is reduced. For a near-term practical
diffractive sunshade (ρ= 0.18 g/m2, R= 6· 10− 4), it is found that
displacing the sub-Lagrangian could become feasible depending on the
available electric propulsion systems. Xenon-based systems (Isp= 3200) do
not yield an advantage in mass over a non-displaced orbit. In contrast,
argon-based systems such as VASIMR (Isp= 5000) could reduce dry mass by
60%, by displacing L′
1= 1.596· 106 km to X0= 106 km. One year’s production supply of argon could
sustain this displacement for 14 years. For an ideal theoretical sunshade
(ρ= 0.0273, R= 6· 10− 4), the gains are even larger. A reduction in dry
mass of close to 50% for 70 years could be possible with the same cost,
displacing it from L′1= 2.36· 106 km to X0= 1.7· 106 km. The results should
be interpreted with caution, as they are generated under key simplifying
assumptions. They do, however, indicate that under certain conditions a
reduction in mass may be achievable by displacing the sunshade equilibrium
point. Future work should include the effects of time-varying thrust and
realistic structural systems for more realistic values.

*Source: DiVA*

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