Submitted by PhyneasPhysicsPhrog t3_zt4amj in space
Comments
bookers555 t1_j1btlmr wrote
>I always thought this was a bad idea because I pictured microwaves blasting down and frying any bird that happened to fly through
It's not like that's going to stop tech development. Hell, birds can fly into plane or helicopter engines and it doesn't just kill the bird, it can easily disable the aircraft as well, and it's not like that stopped us from using them. Might sound cold, but that's how things are.
mekatzer t1_j1cfj3x wrote
Look at you two, thinking birds are real… /s
DanWainwright21 t1_j1ck19e wrote
What’s the sarcasm for??? They’re not real… man.
virtiousredditor t1_j1curbb wrote
Government drone account, block and move on.
[deleted] t1_j1dnbfr wrote
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[deleted] t1_j1cq1wv wrote
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FenitoFussolini69 t1_j1cu1rl wrote
They don't even know that Bird is an acronym for Basic Information-Recording Drone, smh.
Makhnos_Tachanka t1_j1c2w6i wrote
Yeah it's not a damn microwave oven. They're just not going to be that powerful on the ground. You need big ass antennas covering a lot of area to collect the power. Even if you wanted to fry birds with it, it would be a significant engineering challenge achieving that level of beam collimation.
ackermann t1_j1cuy9q wrote
> need big ass antennas covering a lot of area to collect the power
Though presumably smaller than the area of solar panels you’d need on the ground, to collect the same amount of power from the sun directly. Otherwise, it would largely defeat the purpose, of course.
danielravennest t1_j1eay69 wrote
Solar energy in space is 36% stronger than on the ground, and available 24 hours a day rather than 3-8 for locations on the ground. So a panel in space generates a lot more power, and on a predictable schedule.
The trick is to get that power down to a transmission line on Earth at a reasonable cost. The military is interested in this, because they have to bring power to field bases in random locations. Beams are steerable. The current method involves tanker trucks fueling generators at absurdly high cost.
orrk256 t1_j1dc2rq wrote
No, it is significantly easier and cheaper to put up a bunch of wires somewhere in comparison to solar panels, needs less matinace and isn't as susceptible to "day/night"
mynam3isn3o t1_j1df4fb wrote
I’ve had an ass antenna since puberty
ausnee t1_j1btuwb wrote
Honestly free cooked meals falling from the sky sounds pretty great
representativeofman t1_j1c03qw wrote
You may have seen a meteor shower, but I bet you've never seen a shower "meatier" than this.
Tree0wl t1_j1c1lpp wrote
Oh bravo sir. GOOD AFTERNOON.
needlenozened t1_j1cicp8 wrote
Isn't that already how much energy would be coming down there, on a sunny day? So where's the extra energy meeting transmitted?
go_comatose_for_me t1_j1cimtx wrote
It's that much energy, but the weather isn't supposed to have much of an effect on the output, nor the time of day.
otter111a t1_j1c15qw wrote
I want you to think about what you’ve done /u/go_comatose_for_me And from now on. Stop playing with yourself
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quadmasta t1_j1bvmdl wrote
Ever see a bird fly in front of a long range microwave transmission antenna when it starts transmitting? It does what you'd pictured
go_comatose_for_me t1_j1bw4xi wrote
That is something that I have for sure never seen.
danielravennest t1_j1ec3bd wrote
Most bird deaths from microwave towers are from running into guy wires, not the beams.
youknowithadtobedone t1_j1cuzce wrote
I mean that makes a lot of sense right? It literally is the energy of the sun on a sunny day (it's always sunny in space) minus a few conversion losses
danielravennest t1_j1e9w24 wrote
It is hard to focus radio waves tightly from space. You need a big transmitter antenna, which only makes sense for high power levels.
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quettil t1_j1f01cj wrote
> but reading around a bit they say the energy isn't much more than that of the sun on a sunny day.
Then you'd need a receiver as big as a normal solar farm. So why bother with orbital solar?
Xkloid t1_j1buo5e wrote
I wonder if this could have an application on Mars, avoiding the dust storms, and they could get the solar unit in place before landing on the planet with a receiver unit ready to go for power to get right to work.
creativename87639 t1_j1dsfr0 wrote
I would assume the ideal early settlement energy on a planet covered in dust would be some form of nuclear, that way you don’t have try to get RF waves through the atmosphere as well.
CosmicBrownie152023 t1_j1f0gho wrote
Problem with that is that Mars is devoid of heavy radioactive elements like uranium-235 that would power the reactors.
creativename87639 t1_j1f1sfz wrote
Luckily we have an abundance of those metals here on earth.
CosmicBrownie152023 t1_j1f4nly wrote
That is true. If we had an efficient way to transport them, we could power outposts using materials from Earth. We could also get more through astroid mining. Personally I think trying to colonize Mars in the next 100 years would be a bad idea. We should start with an easier project like the moon.
Cindexxx t1_j1fcye9 wrote
We are iirc. Makes it a great pit stop to go other places. Launching from earth directly sucks.
creativename87639 t1_j1fdl2r wrote
Yes we are, it’s the main purpose of the Artemis mission, I think the manned rocket to the moon goes up in 2024-2025
CosmicBrownie152023 t1_j1fecfs wrote
I had forgotten about that. At least we have some proper planning.
creativename87639 t1_j1fehzm wrote
It’s a really cool mission, I’m sad I missed Artemis 1 earlier this year but I plan on going to the Kennedy space center for the next one, it’s going to be an amazing accomplishment to set up a permanent base on the moon.
CosmicBrownie152023 t1_j1fg0n7 wrote
Unfortunately I'll probably miss this one too. That would be an incredible accomplishment though. Setting up a moon base would be an accomplishment on par with, if not great than, the I.S.S.
Jobotics t1_j1g8rfy wrote
Start at the moon, mine it to build a large-ish space habitat that can grow food and perfect closed loop life support systems. Build a second one and park it in orbit around Mars. Then be able to land on Mars and return at will. Profit.
CosmicBrownie152023 t1_j1gd2ez wrote
You should make NASA work for you.
Gk5321 t1_j1fb067 wrote
Who knows, maybe by the time we get there fusion will actually be working.
CosmicBrownie152023 t1_j1fzmxr wrote
That would be an interesting idea.
danielravennest t1_j1e9m1d wrote
The difficulty is in focusing a beam tightly enough for a small setup on the ground. A combination of small nuclear units (around 30kWe + 90 kW thermal each) and solar panels with dust brushes should do for small bases. Various rovers have run for several years without panel cleaning.
KochibaMasatoshi t1_j1ett8p wrote
Why dust brushes, like a windshield wiper is a thing none of the rovers or stationary landers have ever been equipped with?
danielravennest t1_j1evx21 wrote
Solar farms on Earth actually use robots on tracks with soft brushes to clean the panels. They get used in dry and dusty areas. In areas with lots of water, they just get sprayed.
The Insight lander that just died is 1/10th the weight of a large modern communications satellite. Deep space missions have had incredibly tight weight margins. So anything optional tends to get left behind.
The SpaceX Starship is being designed to land 200-300 times bigger payloads on Mars than Insight, and 100-200 times heavier than Curiosity and Perseverance. So they could include optional stuff like cleaning devices. They will also have people, so a simple dust brush you use once a year to clean the solar panels may be all you need.
KochibaMasatoshi t1_j1ewmh6 wrote
Thank you! I guess also they thought the lander/rover to be faulty even before the brush is actually needed. I mean they design these things for a few months only (ofc this is also politics, design it for 90 days, make sure it works 2 years and you get the funds for next year).
pmMeAllofIt t1_j1g4qih wrote
It's a lot of added weight. The solar array is a thin film that gets fanned out. To add a whiper brush would add a lot of weight, and would need different design array that is rigid enough to be brushed.
Jake0024 t1_j1f0wfw wrote
How do the satellites in orbit get energy to the surface, avoiding the dust storms in the atmosphere in the middle?
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quettil t1_j1ezx0a wrote
If it's too dusty for your solar panels, surely it's too dusty to beam power down?
gerkletoss t1_j1fonz5 wrote
A reactor would likely be a better choice for Mars
ConcentricGroove t1_j1c4l8l wrote
Doesn't seem cost effective, but then neither did corn based ethanol.
jinqsi t1_j1cj94j wrote
Still isn’t but it wasn’t then either!
Cosmacelf t1_j1c4axh wrote
Seems like a niche application.
“If you have a flood or a hurricane that knocks out power to an area, it takes weeks sometimes for them to get back online,” Patel said. “This system can provide temporary power during those periods until that infrastructure is built back up.”
Erinalope t1_j1c7j26 wrote
That’s just the application they’re announcing, I imagine the military would have other ideas. Nothing stealth obviously.
danielravennest t1_j1ecj2h wrote
Two military applications are forward bases, which get set up in random locations, and spy devices. Beams are steerable, so it can be aimed wherever a base ends up. Spy devices are low power, so you don't need massive space satellites to send enough.
NecessaryCat5e t1_j1ccth3 wrote
Nah, it's probably going to be used to extends supply lines. Who needs a gas generator when you can just beam electricity down when you need it? After all they are a military contractor.
ayoungad t1_j1ddh1k wrote
Niche? This is game changing remote power.
Really game changing power in general.
I_had_to_know_too t1_j1dkg6g wrote
Imagine solar powered drones adding a secondary power source that could keep them in flight indefinitely.
Cosmacelf t1_j1f70oi wrote
That would be cool. Don’t know if that’s possible though.
I_had_to_know_too t1_j1ga6mf wrote
It can be, but not if we meet new challenges with a defeatist attitude.
These small steps might not seem as flashy as the promise of fusion energy within the next decade, but they are progress that we can build upon to do new and amazing things. We just need to be willing to dream a little bigger.
quettil t1_j1f07af wrote
It would be quicker to get normal infrastructure working again than to set up a solar power receiver.
jeffh4 t1_j1cqr1c wrote
Well, it's about time.
The idea of Space-Based Solar Power has been around since the 1970s, at the time popularized by the book The High Frontier.
Just like the recent milestone in fusion power generation, this technology would need a large investment of time and money to become viable. The higher the investment, the faster the development.
oalfonso t1_j1czatf wrote
Can it work during night to avoid having batteries as backup of solar power? Collect energy in the sunny side, send it to the dark side and from there to the earth.
ChefExellence t1_j1f66mb wrote
> Collect energy in the sunny side, send it to the dark side and from there to the earth.
This part isn't necessary, the satellite simply has to be placed in a higher orbit so that it spends very little time in the shade. Of course, now you need to transmit the energy over a greater distance, but you probably want to keep your power satellites in a geostationary orbit anyway so you don't need to keep switching between multiple power satellites
DeathGamer99 t1_j1deywn wrote
Need satellite to satellite transfers for that, because sending energy from halfway of sunny side using atmosphere is not feasible as most of the energy will dissipate because much longer atmosphere pass through. Even then satellite to satellite transfers need to be super efficient because you don't want to cook the satellite receiver.
PM_Me_Ur_Fanboiz t1_j1dbiim wrote
Now, just manufacture about 100 million of those, flip ‘em over and lash ‘em together. The Dyson sphere is closer than we think.
ilike_funnies t1_j1dvpl2 wrote
maybe more like 100 billion and put them in orbit around the sun then have that energy transferred 100 million miles. I think there's a few big hurdles still unfortunately.
PM_Me_Ur_Fanboiz t1_j1eaa1i wrote
For sure. There was an air of sarcasm to that. Shooting a microwave bean 100 million miles doesn’t seem as hard as focusing 360 degrees of Satellite beams in one direction, but I’m sure it can be done.
1000Airplanes t1_j1bvh98 wrote
Don't ask them about the laser this solar power is providing ;)
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tcwillis79 t1_j1dvdg5 wrote
I played enough sim city to know this is a terrible idea.
danielravennest t1_j1e91n5 wrote
To put this in perspective, this experiment for space solar power is at the same level as Bell Lab's first ground solar panel around 1954. It took decades to reach large-scale use.
Hoosier_Ken t1_j1fmc0n wrote
If you thought that the tin hat crowd went bonkers over 5G they'll be completely bat shit crazy over this.
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chochinator t1_j1egbdy wrote
We creating a Dyson sphere of drones encircling the sun... bout time
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MagicDave131 t1_j1djipz wrote
No, the KEY hurdle is getting that energy down to Earth without losing most of it to diffusion and frying everything in the path of the transmission beam. Good luck with that.
call_Back_Function t1_j1dyokj wrote
They would need massive stationary antennas. Those only make sense with geo sync orbit making the diffusion terrible. Going solar > electric > rf > electric. The conversion loss is terrible.
I really wish this tech was viable but it’s just not.
danielravennest t1_j1edfe7 wrote
Terrestrial solar has the same first two steps (solar > electric). But satellites in space get 36% more solar energy per square meter because no atmospheric absorption, and 3-8 times the operating hours depending on location, because no night or weather.
So you are starting out with a big advantage. There are efficiency losses going to RF and back to electric, and then there is cost. Launching to space has been way too expensive to make this idea work.
call_Back_Function t1_j1edtqa wrote
Don’t forget the inverse square law. The bigger the distance transmission the bigger receiver you need.
danielravennest t1_j1eppyn wrote
The Raleigh Criterion (1.22 lambda/D) is what sets the beam angle. Lambda is the wavelength, and D is the transmitter diameter. The larger the transmitter, the tighter the beam.
Since the beam spreads as a circle and travels in a straight line, the diameter grows with distance, and beam area grows as distance squared. Total beam energy is constant at any distance till you hit the atmosphere.
The beam intensity goes as the inverse square because the area goes as the square and the total energy is constant. So that is a derived value from the physics.
For a reasonable size satellite and ground antenna, therefore you want the highest reasonable frequency and the lowest reasonable orbit.
arianeeroy t1_j1e7g06 wrote
More on the militarization of Space--endangering all life on the Planet, and the Planet itself.
go_comatose_for_me t1_j1bpid1 wrote
I always thought this was a bad idea because I pictured microwaves blasting down and frying any bird that happened to fly through the space, or the easy conversion to military use, frying targets like something out of Real Genius, but reading around a bit they say the energy isn't much more than that of the sun on a sunny day.