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posted by chromas on Thursday August 01 2019, @09:29AM   Printer-friendly

LightSail 2 Spacecraft Successfully Demonstrates Flight by Light:

Years of computer simulations. Countless ground tests. They've all led up to now. The Planetary Society's crowdfunded LightSail 2 spacecraft is successfully raising its orbit solely on the power of sunlight.

Since unfurling the spacecraft's silver solar sail last week, mission managers have been optimizing the way the spacecraft orients itself during solar sailing. After a few tweaks, LightSail 2 began raising its orbit around the Earth. In the past 4 days, the spacecraft has raised its orbital high point, or apogee, by about 2 kilometers. The perigee, or low point of its orbit, has dropped by a similar amount, which is consistent with pre-flight expectations for the effects of atmospheric drag on the spacecraft. The mission team has confirmed the apogee increase can only be attributed to solar sailing, meaning LightSail 2 has successfully completed its primary goal of demonstrating flight by light for CubeSats.

"We're thrilled to announce mission success for LightSail 2," said LightSail program manager and Planetary Society chief scientist Bruce Betts. "Our criteria was to demonstrate controlled solar sailing in a CubeSat by changing the spacecraft's orbit using only the light pressure of the Sun, something that's never been done before. I'm enormously proud of this team. It's been a long road and we did it."

[...] After LightSail 2's month-long orbit raising phase, the spacecraft will begin to deorbit, eventually reentering the atmosphere in roughly a year. The aluminized Mylar sail, about the size of a boxing ring, may currently be visible for some observers at dusk and dawn. The Planetary Society's mission control dashboard shows upcoming passes based on user location, and includes a link to a page that highlights passes when the sail is more likely to be visible.

Roughly 50,000 Planetary Society members and private citizens from more than 100 countries, as well as foundations and corporate partners, donated to the LightSail 2 mission, which cost $7 million from 2009 through March 2019.


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  • (Score: 1) by Chrontius on Friday August 02 2019, @05:15AM (1 child)

    by Chrontius (5246) on Friday August 02 2019, @05:15AM (#874484)

    Can they try for it anyway, and see if it works?

    Independent of orbital coordination issues, is it physically possible?

  • (Score: 2) by c0lo on Friday August 02 2019, @06:07AM

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Friday August 02 2019, @06:07AM (#874496) Journal

    I don't know, you'll have to ask them.

    I suspect it depends on the control over the deployed surface's orientation, the drag in low Earth orbit, the orbit's plane...
    The solar wind always blows the sail away from Sun. Assuming an equatorial orbit, on the sunny side of the orbit, if the sail is oriented alway to max exposure all the time, the solar wind will push it towards Earth (lower altitude, higher speed) while on the "dark side" there'll be no radiation pressure.

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    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford