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The Heliogyro ReloadedThe heliogyro is a high-performance, spinning solar sail architecture that uses long - order of kilometers - reflective membrane strips to produce thrust from solar radiation pressure. The heliogyro s membrane blades spin about a central hub and are stiffened by centrifugal forces only, making the design exceedingly light weight. Blades are also stowed and deployed from rolls; eliminating deployment and packaging problems associated with handling extremely large, and delicate, membrane sheets used with most traditional square-rigged or spinning disk solar sail designs. The heliogyro solar sail concept was first advanced in the 1960s by MacNeal. A 15 km diameter version was later extensively studied in the 1970s by JPL for an ambitious Comet Halley rendezvous mission, but ultimately not selected due to the need for a risk-reduction flight demonstration. Demonstrating system-level feasibility of a large, spinning heliogyro solar sail on the ground is impossible; however, recent advances in microsatellite bus technologies, coupled with the successful flight demonstration of reflectance control technologies on the JAXA IKAROS solar sail, now make an affordable, small-scale heliogyro technology flight demonstration potentially feasible. In this paper, we will present an overview of the history of the heliogyro solar sail concept, with particular attention paid to the MIT 200-meter-diameter heliogyro study of 1989, followed by a description of our updated, low-cost, heliogyro flight demonstration concept. Our preliminary heliogyro concept (HELIOS) should be capable of demonstrating an order-of-magnitude characteristic acceleration performance improvement over existing solar sail demonstrators (HELIOS target: 0.5 to 1.0 mm/s2 at 1.0 AU); placing the heliogyro technology in the range required to enable a variety of science and human exploration relevant support missions.
Document ID
20110023680
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Wilkie, William K.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Warren, Jerry E.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Thompson, M. W.
(Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Lisman, P. D.
(Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Walkemeyer, P. E.
(Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Tech. Pasadena, CA, United States)
Guerrant, D. V.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Lawrence, D. A.
(Colorado Univ. Boulder, CO, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
December 5, 2011
Subject Category
Spacecraft Design, Testing And Performance
Report/Patent Number
NF1676L-12976
Meeting Information
Meeting: JANNAF Interagency Propulsion Committee Meeting
Location: Huntsville, AL
Country: United States
Start Date: December 5, 2011
End Date: December 9, 2011
Sponsors: Department of the Air Force, Department of the Army, Department of the Navy, NASA Headquarters
Funding Number(s)
WBS: WBS 432938.11.01.07.43.22.01
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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