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posted by n1 on Thursday July 28 2016, @03:02AM   Printer-friendly
from the spinning-in-space-in-space dept.

A story from Engadget reports:

Satellites often rely on reaction wheels, or constantly spinning flywheels, to tweak their attitudes without using precious fuel. However, they tend to be very delicate -- since they use ball bearings, they spin relatively slowly (under 6,000RPM), take up a lot of space, need tightly controlled environments and aren't very precise. Thankfully, researchers at Celeroton have a better way. They've created a magnetically levitated motor that achieves the effect of a regular reaction wheel with virtually none of the drawbacks. Since its rotor floats in a magnetic field, it can spin much faster (up to 150,000RPM) without wearing out, creating vibrations or requiring a special, lubricated environment. And given that it produces the same angular momentum as a much larger reaction wheel, it's perfect for CubeSats and any other tiny satellite where internal space is at a premium.

The motor is only a prototype at the moment, and it'll take a while before there's something commercially viable. However, multiple potential partners (including the European Space Agency) are reportedly interested. You may well see production satellites that can always adjust their positions, which might keep them useful well after conventional orbiters break down and become space junk.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 28 2016, @09:16AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 28 2016, @09:16AM (#381115)

    I'm kinda surprised this is new. Magnetically levitated turbo-molecular vacuum pumps and energy-storage flywheels have been a thing for decades. So applying it to a reaction wheel where there's a relatively easy source of vacuum and electricity just seems obvious.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 28 2016, @02:59PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 28 2016, @02:59PM (#381213)

    Maybe I'm misunderstanding how this works but wouldn't something like this require a constant input of power?