On Jun 4, 2009, at 11:37 PM, Mark Iverson wrote:

"You are making it up as you go by the look of it. Now consider a column through which the photons of S_T are passing through the atmosphere they have a momentum what happens to that momentum due to interaction with the particles in the amosphere on the way out? Try to stay focused on the
question."

Photons require about 2.94x10^9 watts per kg of thrust, or about 3 million square meters per kg of thrust at maximum insolation. See:

http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/PhotonThrust.pdf

Using earth's radius r as 6400 km, the area is Pi*r^2 = 1.3x10^14 m^2. Total solar insolation thrust on the earth is thus (1x10^3 W/ m^2)(1.3x10^14 m^2)/(2.94x10^9 W/kgf) = 4.4x10^7 kgf. In other words, about 4.4 metric tons of force.

Using Newton's F=m*a, or a=F/m, we have, for a 6x10^24 kg earth, that a = (4.4x10^7 kgf)/(6x10^24 kg) = 7x10^-17 m/s^2.

Light shining on the earth for a year thus would accelerate the earth by a whopping 2.2x10^-9 m/s, or about 22 angstroms per second, a truly nanospeed.

You may want to check my work.  I didn't.

Best regards,

Horace Heffner
http://www.mtaonline.net/~hheffner/




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