Spacecraft 'could surf gravitational tubes' to make solar travel more efficient
Gravitational corridors could help spacecraft travel the solar system like 
ships carried on ocean currents, making longer and cheaper journeys possible, 
it has been claimed. 

 


By Andy Bloxham
Published: 7:20AM BST 11 Sep 2009
 
The gravitational corridors could help spacecraft ply the Solar System like 
ships borne on ocean currents Photo: PA 
 

Scientists in the US are trying to map the twisting "tubes" so they can be used 
to cut the cost of space travel. 
Each one acts like a gravitational version of the Gulf Stream, created from the 
complex interplay of forces between planets and moons. 
 
Depicted by computer graphics, the pathways can look like strands of spaghetti 
that wrap around planetary bodies and snake between them. 
The pathways connect sites called Lagrangian points where gravitational forces 
balance out. 
Professor Shane Ross, from Virginia Tech university, said: "The idea is there 
are low energy pathways winding between planets and moons that would slash the 
amount of fuel needed to explore the solar system. 
"These are freefall pathways in space around and between gravitational bodies. 
Instead of falling down, like you do on Earth, you fall along these tubes. 
"Each of the tubes starts off narrow and small and as it gets further out it 
gets wider and might also split. 
"I like to think of them as being similar to ocean currents, but they are 
gravitational currents. 
"If you're in a parking orbit round the Earth, and one of them intersects your 
trajectory, you just need enough fuel to change your velocity and now you're on 
a new trajectory that is free." 
Riding one of the gravitational currents was unlike exploiting the "slingshot" 
effect of a planet or moon's gravity, a routine space travel technique, he 
explained. 
"Its not the same as a slingshot," said Prof Ross. "Slingshots don't put you in 
orbit round a moon, whereas this does." 
Just one US mission so far has made use of the concept. The Genesis spacecraft 
was launched in 2004 to capture solar wind particles and return them to Earth. 
Following the gravitational pathways allowed the amount of fuel carried by the 
probe to be cut tenfold. 
The mission ended in failure, but only because a parachute failed on landing. 
The corridors were especially useful for voyaging between a planet's moons, 
said Prof Ross, speaking at the British Science Festival at the University of 
Surrey in Guildford. 
"Once you get to another planet that has its own tubes you can use them to 
explore its moons," he added. "You could travel between the moons of Jupiter 
essentially for free. All you need is a little bit of fuel to do course 
corrections." 
The trade off was time, he said. It would take a few months to get round the 
Jovian moon system. 
However, interplanetary travel would always require some fuel, Prof Ross 
pointed out. Attempting to get a free tube ride from Earth to Mars would take 
thousands of years. 
 
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/space/6171848/Spacecraft-could-surf-gravitational-tubes-to-make-solar-travel-more-efficient.html


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