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Space tether

Space tethers are long cables which can be used for propulsion, momentum exchange, stabilization and attitude control, or maintaining the relative positions of the components of a large dispersed satellite/spacecraft sensor system.[1] Depending on the mission objectives and altitude, spaceflight using this form of spacecraft propulsion is theorized to be significantly less expensive than spaceflight using rocket engines.

Artist's conception of satellite with a tether

Main techniques edit

Tether satellites might be used for various purposes, including research into tether propulsion, tidal stabilization and orbital plasma dynamics. Five main techniques for employing space tethers are in development:[2][3]

Electrodynamic tethers

Electrodynamic tethers are primarily used for propulsion. These are conducting tethers that carry a current that can generate either thrust or drag from a planetary magnetic field, in much the same way as an electric motor does.

Momentum exchange tethers

These can be either rotating tethers, or non-rotating tethers, that capture an arriving spacecraft and then release it at a later time into a different orbit with a different velocity. Momentum exchange tethers can be used for orbital maneuvering, or as part of a planetary-surface-to-orbit / orbit-to-escape-velocity space transportation system.

Tethered formation flying

This is typically a non-conductive tether that accurately maintains a set distance between multiple space vehicles flying in formation.

Electric sail

A form of solar wind sail with electrically charged tethers that will be pushed by the momentum of solar wind ions.

Universal Orbital Support System

A concept for suspending an object from a tether orbiting in space.

Many uses for space tethers have been proposed, including deployment as space elevators, as skyhooks, and for doing propellant-free orbital transfers.

History edit

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (1857–1935) once proposed a tower so tall that it reached into space, so that it would be held there by the rotation of Earth. However, at the time, there was no realistic way to build it.

In 1960, another Russian, Yuri Artsutanov, wrote in greater detail about the idea of a tensile cable to be deployed from a geosynchronous satellite, downwards towards the ground, and upwards away, keeping the cable balanced.[4] This is the space elevator idea, a type of synchronous tether that would rotate with the Earth. However, given the materials technology of the time, this too was impractical on Earth.

In the 1970s, Jerome Pearson independently conceived the idea of a space elevator, sometimes referred to as a synchronous tether,[5] and, in particular, analyzed a lunar elevator that can go through the L1 and L2 points, and this was found to be possible with materials then existing.

In 1977, Hans Moravec[6] and later Robert L. Forward investigated the physics of non-synchronous skyhooks, also known as rotating skyhooks, and performed detailed simulations of tapered rotating tethers that could pick objects off, and place objects onto, the Moon, Mars and other planets, with little loss, or even a net gain of energy.[7][8]

In 1979, NASA examined the feasibility of the idea and gave direction to the study of tethered systems, especially tethered satellites.[1][9]

In 1990, Eagle Sarmont proposed a non-rotating Orbiting Skyhook for an Earth-to-orbit / orbit-to-escape-velocity Space Transportation System in a paper titled "An Orbiting Skyhook: Affordable Access to Space".[10][11][12] In this concept a suborbital launch vehicle would fly to the bottom end of a Skyhook, while spacecraft bound for higher orbit, or returning from higher orbit, would use the upper end.

In 2000, NASA and Boeing considered a HASTOL concept, where a rotating tether would take payloads from a hypersonic aircraft (at half of orbital velocity) to orbit.[13]

Missions edit

 
Graphic of the US Naval Research Laboratory's TiPS tether satellite. Only a small part of the 4 km tether is shown deployed.

A tether satellite is a satellite connected to another by a space tether. A number of satellites have been launched to test tether technologies, with varying degrees of success.

Types edit

There are many different (and overlapping) types of tether.

Momentum exchange tethers, rotating edit

Momentum exchange tethers are one of many applications for space tethers. Momentum exchange tethers come in two types; rotating and non-rotating. A rotating tether will create a controlled force on the end-masses of the system due to centrifugal acceleration. While the tether system rotates, the objects on either end of the tether will experience continuous acceleration; the magnitude of the acceleration depends on the length of the tether and the rotation rate. Momentum exchange occurs when an end body is released during the rotation. The transfer of momentum to the released object will cause the rotating tether to lose energy, and thus lose velocity and altitude. However, using electrodynamic tether thrusting, or ion propulsion the system can then re-boost itself with little or no expenditure of consumable reaction mass.

Skyhook edit

 
A rotating and a tidally stabilized skyhook in orbit

A skyhook is a theoretical class of orbiting tether propulsion intended to lift payloads to high altitudes and speeds.[14][15][16][17][18] Proposals for skyhooks include designs that employ tethers spinning at hypersonic speed for catching high speed payloads or high altitude aircraft and placing them in orbit.[19]

Electrodynamics edit

 
Medium close-up view, captured with a 70 mm camera, shows Tethered Satellite System deployment.

Electrodynamic tethers are long conducting wires, such as one deployed from a tether satellite, which can operate on electromagnetic principles as generators, by converting their kinetic energy to electrical energy, or as motors, converting electrical energy to kinetic energy.[1] Electric potential is generated across a conductive tether by its motion through the Earth's magnetic field. The choice of the metal conductor to be used in an electrodynamic tether is determined by a variety of factors. Primary factors usually include high electrical conductivity and low density. Secondary factors, depending on the application, include cost, strength, and melting point.

An electrodynamic tether was profiled in the documentary film Orphans of Apollo as technology that was to be used to keep the Russian space station Mir in orbit.[20][21]

Formation flying edit

This is the use of a (typically) non-conductive tether to connect multiple spacecraft. Tethered Experiment for Mars inter-Planetary Operations (TEMPO³) is a proposed 2011[clarification needed] experiment to study the technique.

Universal Orbital Support System edit

 
Example of a possible layout using the Universal Orbital Support System

A theoretical type of non-rotating tethered satellite system, it is a concept for providing space-based support to things suspended above an astronomical object.[22] The orbital system is a coupled mass system wherein the upper supporting mass (A) is placed in an orbit around a given celestial body such that it can support a suspended mass (B) at a specific height above the surface of the celestial body, but lower than (A).

Technical difficulties edit

Gravitational gradient stabilization edit

 
Description of the forces contributing towards maintaining a gravity gradient alignment in a tether system

Instead of rotating end for end, tethers can also be kept straight by the slight difference in the strength of gravity over their length.

A non-rotating tether system has a stable orientation that is aligned along the local vertical (of the earth or other body). This can be understood by inspection of the figure on the right where two spacecraft at two different altitudes have been connected by a tether. Normally, each spacecraft would have a balance of gravitational (e.g. Fg1) and centrifugal (e.g. Fc1) forces, but when tied together by a tether, these values begin to change with respect to one another. This phenomenon occurs because, without the tether, the higher-altitude mass would travel slower than the lower mass. The system must move at a single speed, so the tether must therefore slow down the lower mass and speed up the upper one. The centrifugal force of the tethered upper body is increased, while that of the lower-altitude body is reduced. This results in the centrifugal force of the upper body and the gravitational force of the lower body being dominant. This difference in forces naturally aligns the system along the local vertical, as seen in the figure.[23]

Atomic oxygen edit

Objects in low Earth orbit are subjected to noticeable erosion from atomic oxygen due to the high orbital speed with which the molecules strike as well as their high reactivity. This could quickly erode a tether.[24]

Micrometeorites and space junk edit

Simple single-strand tethers are susceptible to micrometeoroids and space junk. Several systems have since been proposed and tested to improve debris resistance:

  • The US Naval Research Laboratory has successfully flown a long term 6-kilometer (3.7 mi) long, 2–3-millimeter (0.079–0.118 in) diameter tether with an outer layer of Spectra 1000 braid and a core of acrylic yarn.[25] This satellite, the Tether Physics and Survivability Experiment (TiPS), was launched in June 1996 and remained in operation over 10 years, finally breaking in July 2006.[26]
  • Robert P. Hoyt patented an engineered circular net, such that a cut strand's strains would be redistributed automatically around the severed strand. This is called a Hoytether. Hoytethers have theoretical lifetimes of decades.
  • Researchers with JAXA have also proposed net-based tethers for their future missions.[27]

Large pieces of junk would still cut most tethers, including the improved versions listed here, but these are currently tracked on radar and have predictable orbits. Although thrusters could be used to change the orbit of the system, a tether could also be temporally wiggled in the right place, using less energy, to dodge known pieces of junk.[citation needed]

Radiation edit

Radiation, including UV radiation tend to degrade tether materials, and reduce lifespan. Tethers that repeatedly traverse the Van Allen belts can have markedly lower life than those that stay in low earth orbit or are kept outside Earth's magnetosphere.

Construction edit

Properties of useful materials edit

 
TSS-1R tether composition [NASA]

Tether properties and materials are dependent on the application. However, there are some common properties. To achieve maximum performance and low cost, tethers would need to be made of materials with the combination of high strength or electrical conductivity and low density. All space tethers are susceptible to space debris or micrometeoroids. Therefore, system designers will need to decide whether or not a protective coating is needed, including relative to UV and atomic oxygen.

For applications that exert high tensile forces on the tether, the materials need to be strong and light. Some current tether designs use crystalline plastics such as ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene, aramid or carbon fiber. A possible future material would be carbon nanotubes, which have an estimated tensile strength between 140 and 177 GPa (20.3 and 25.7 million psi; 1.38 and 1.75 million atm), and a proven tensile strength in the range 50–60 GPa (7.3–8.7 million psi; 490,000–590,000 atm) for some individual nanotubes. (A number of other materials obtain 10 to 20 GPa (1.5 to 2.9 million psi; 99,000 to 197,000 atm) in some samples on the nano scale, but translating such strengths to the macro scale has been challenging so far, with, as of 2011, CNT-based ropes being an order of magnitude less strong, not yet stronger than more conventional carbon fiber on that scale).[28][29][30]

For some applications, the tensile force on the tether is projected to be less than 65 newtons (15 lbf).[31] Material selection in this case depends on the purpose of the mission and design constraints. Electrodynamic tethers, such as the one used on TSS-1R,[clarification needed] may use thin copper wires for high conductivity (see EDT).

There are design equations for certain applications that may be used to aid designers in identifying typical quantities that drive material selection.

Space elevator equations typically use a "characteristic length", Lc, which is also known as its "self-support length" and is the length of untapered cable it can support in a constant 1 g gravity field.

 ,

where σ is the stress limit (in pressure units) and ρ is the density of the material.

Hypersonic skyhook equations use the material's "specific velocity" which is equal to the maximum tangential velocity a spinning hoop can attain without breaking:

 

For rotating tethers (rotovators) the value used is the material's 'characteristic velocity' which is the maximum tip velocity a rotating untapered cable can attain without breaking,

 

The characteristic velocity equals the specific velocity multiplied by the square root of two.

These values are used in equations similar to the rocket equation and are analogous to specific impulse or exhaust velocity. The higher these values are, the more efficient and lighter the tether can be in relation to the payloads that they can carry. Eventually however, the mass of the tether propulsion system will be limited at the low end by other factors such as momentum storage.

Practical materials edit

Proposed materials include Kevlar, ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene,[citation needed] carbon nanotubes and M5 fiber. M5 is a synthetic fiber that is lighter than Kevlar or Spectra.[32] According to Pearson, Levin, Oldson, and Wykes in their article "The Lunar Space Elevator", an M5 ribbon 30 mm (1.2 in) wide and 0.023 mm (0.91 mils) thick, would be able to support 2,000 kg (4,400 lb) on the lunar surface. It would also be able to hold 100 cargo vehicles, each with a mass of 580 kg (1,280 lb), evenly spaced along the length of the elevator.[5] Other materials that could be used are T1000G carbon fiber, Spectra 2000, or Zylon.[33]

Potential tether / elevator materials[5]
Material Density
ρ
(kg/m3)
Stress limit
σ
(GPa)
Characteristic length
Lc = σ/ρg
(km)
Specific velocity
Vs = σ/ρ
(km/s)
Char. velocity
Vc = 2σ/ρ
(km/s)
Single-wall carbon nanotubes (individual molecules measured) 2,266 50 2,200 4.7 6.6
Aramid, polybenzoxazole (PBO) fiber ("Zylon")[33] 1,340 5.9 450 2.1 3.0
Toray carbon fiber (T1000G) 1,810 6.4 360 1.9 2.7
M5 fiber (planned values) 1,700 9.5 570 2.4 3.3
M5 fiber (existing) 1,700 5.7 340 1.8 2.6
Honeywell extended chain polyethylene fiber (Spectra 2000) 970 3.0 316 1.8 2.5
DuPont Aramid fiber (Kevlar 49) 1,440 3.6 255 1.6 2.2
Silicon carbide [citation needed] 3,000 5.9 199 1.4 2.0

Shape edit

Tapering edit

For gravity stabilized tethers, to exceed the self-support length the tether material can be tapered so that the cross-sectional area varies with the total load at each point along the length of the cable. In practice this means that the central tether structure needs to be thicker than the tips. Correct tapering ensures that the tensile stress at every point in the cable is exactly the same. For very demanding applications, such as an Earth space elevator, the tapering can reduce the excessive ratios of cable weight to payload weight. In lieu of tapering a modular staged tether system maybe used to achieve the same goal. Multiple tethers would be used between stages. The number of tethers would determine the strength of any given cross-section.[34]

Thickness edit

For rotating tethers not significantly affected by gravity, the thickness also varies, and it can be shown that the area, A, is given as a function of r (the distance from the centre) as follows:[35]

 

where R is the radius of tether, v is the velocity with respect to the centre, M is the tip mass,   is the material density, and T is the design tensile strength.

Mass ratio edit

 
Graph of tether mass to payload ratio versus the tip speed in multiples of the characteristic speed of the material

Integrating the area to give the volume and multiplying by the density and dividing by the payload mass gives a payload mass / tether mass ratio of:[35]

 

where erf is the normal probability error function.

Let  ,

 

then:[36]

 

This equation can be compared with the rocket equation, which is proportional to a simple exponent on a velocity, rather than a velocity squared. This difference effectively limits the delta-v that can be obtained from a single tether.

Redundancy edit

In addition the cable shape must be constructed to withstand micrometeorites and space junk. This can be achieved with the use of redundant cables, such as the Hoytether; redundancy can ensure that it is very unlikely that multiple redundant cables would be damaged near the same point on the cable, and hence a very large amount of total damage can occur over different parts of the cable before failure occurs.

Material strength edit

Beanstalks and rotovators are currently limited by the strengths of available materials. Although ultra-high strength plastic fibers (Kevlar and Spectra) permit rotovators to pluck masses from the surface of the Moon and Mars, a rotovator from these materials cannot lift from the surface of the Earth. In theory, high flying, supersonic (or hypersonic) aircraft could deliver a payload to a rotovator that dipped into Earth's upper atmosphere briefly at predictable locations throughout the tropic (and temperate) zone of Earth. As of May 2013, all mechanical tethers (orbital and elevators) are on hold until stronger materials are available.[37]

Cargo capture edit

Cargo capture for rotovators is nontrivial, and failure to capture can cause problems. Several systems have been proposed, such as shooting nets at the cargo, but all add weight, complexity, and another failure mode. At least one lab scale demonstration of a working grapple system has been achieved, however.[38]

Life expectancy edit

Currently, the strongest materials in tension are plastics that require a coating for protection from UV radiation and (depending on the orbit) erosion by atomic oxygen. Disposal of waste heat is difficult in a vacuum, so overheating may cause tether failures or damage.

Control and modelling edit

Pendular motion instability edit

Electrodynamic tethers deployed along the local vertical ('hanging tethers') may suffer from dynamical instability. Pendular motion causes the tether vibration amplitude to build up under the action of electromagnetic interaction. As the mission time increases, this behavior can compromise the performance of the system. Over a few weeks, electrodynamic tethers in Earth orbit might build up vibrations in many modes, as their orbit interacts with irregularities in magnetic and gravitational fields.

One plan to control the vibrations is to actively vary the tether current to counteract the growth of the vibrations. Electrodynamic tethers can be stabilized by reducing their current when it would feed the oscillations, and increasing it when it opposes oscillations. Simulations have demonstrated that this can control tether vibration.[citation needed] This approach requires sensors to measure tether vibrations, which can either be an inertial navigation system on one end of the tether, or satellite navigation systems mounted on the tether, transmitting their positions to a receiver on the end.

Another proposed method is to use spinning electrodynamic tethers instead of hanging tethers. The gyroscopic effect provides passive stabilisation, avoiding the instability.

Surges edit

As mentioned earlier, conductive tethers have failed from unexpected current surges. Unexpected electrostatic discharges have cut tethers (e.g. see Tethered Satellite System Reflight (TSS‑1R) on STS‑75), damaged electronics, and welded tether handling machinery. It may be that the Earth's magnetic field is not as homogeneous as some engineers have believed.

Vibrations edit

Computer models frequently show tethers can snap due to vibration.

Mechanical tether-handling equipment is often surprisingly heavy, with complex controls to damp vibrations. The one ton climber proposed by Brad Edwards for his Space Elevator may detect and suppress most vibrations by changing speed and direction. The climber can also repair or augment a tether by spinning more strands.

The vibration modes that may be a problem include skipping rope, transverse, longitudinal, and pendulum.[39]

Tethers are nearly always tapered, and this can greatly amplify the movement at the thinnest tip in whip-like ways.

Other issues edit

A tether is not a spherical object, and has significant extent. This means that as an extended object, it is not directly modelable as a point source, and this means that the center of mass and center of gravity are not usually colocated. Thus the inverse square law does not apply except at large distances, to the overall behaviour of a tether. Hence the orbits are not completely Keplerian, and in some cases they are actually chaotic.[40]

With bolus designs, rotation of the cable interacting with the non-linear gravity fields found in elliptical orbits can cause exchange of orbital angular momentum and rotation angular momentum. This can make prediction and modelling extremely complex.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Cosmo, M. L.; Lorenzini, E. C., eds. (December 1998). "Tethers In Space Handbook" (PDF) (3rd ed.). NASA. (PDF) from the original on 29 April 2010. Retrieved 20 October 2010. See also version of NASA MSFC 2011-10-27 at the Wayback Machine; available on Scribd 2016-04-21 at the Wayback Machine.
  2. ^ Finckenor, Miria; AIAA Technical Committee (December 2005). "Space Tether". Aerospace America: 78.
  3. ^ Bilen, Sven; AIAA Technical Committee (December 2007). "Space Tethers". Aerospace America: 89.
  4. ^ Artsutanov, Yuri (July 31, 1960). "V Kosmos na Electrovoze" (PDF). Komsomolskaya Pravda (in Russian).
  5. ^ a b c Pearson, Jerome; Eugene Levin; John Oldson & Harry Wykes (2005). "Lunar Space Elevators for Cislunar Space Development: Phase I Final Technical Report" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 2016-03-03.
  6. ^ "The Journal of the Astronautical Sciences, v25#4, pp. 307-322, Oct-Dec 1977". cmu.edu. from the original on 3 October 2017. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  7. ^ Moravec, Hans (1986). "Orbital Bridges". Retrieved January 8, 2023.
  8. ^ Hans Moravec, "Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhooks for the Moon and Mars with Conventional Materials" Archived 1999-10-12 at archive.today (Hans Moravec's thoughts on skyhooks, tethers, rotovators, etc., as of 1987) (accessed 10 October 2010)
  9. ^ Joseph A. Carroll and John C. Oldson, “Tethers for Small Satellite Applications” 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine, presented at the 1995 AIAA / USU Small Satellite Conference in Logan, Utah, United States (accessed 20 October 2010)
  10. ^ Sarmont, Eagle (May 26, 1990). (Archived copy). Anaheim, CA: International Space Development Conference. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  11. ^ Sarmont, Eagle (October 1994). "How an Earth Orbiting Tether Makes Possible an Affordable Earth-Moon Space Transportation System". SAE Technical Paper Series (Report). SAE Technical Paper 942120. Vol. 1. doi:10.4271/942120. from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  12. ^ Smitherman, D.V., "Space Elevators, An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium", NASA/CP-2000-210429
  13. ^ Thomas J. Bogar; et al. (7 January 2000). (PDF). NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts. Research Grant No. 07600-018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 July 2011.
  14. ^ H. Moravec, "A non-synchronous orbital skyhook". Journal of the Astronautical Sciences, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 307–322, 1977.
  15. ^ G. Colombo, E. M. Gaposchkin, M. D. Grossi, and G. C. Weiffenbach, “The sky-hook: a shuttle-borne tool for low-orbital-altitude research,” Meccanica, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 3–20, 1975.
  16. ^ .M. L. Cosmo and E. C. Lorenzini, Tethers in Space Handbook, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala, USA, 3rd edition, 1997.
  17. ^ L. Johnson, B. Gilchrist, R. D. Estes, and E. Lorenzini, "Overview of future NASA tether applications," Advances in Space Research, vol. 24, no. 8, pp. 1055–1063, 1999.
  18. ^ E. M. Levin, "Dynamic Analysis of Space Tether Missions", American Astronautical Society, Washington, DC, USA, 2007.
  19. ^ Hypersonic Airplane Space Tether Orbital Launch (HASTOL) System: Interim Study Results 2016-04-27 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ "Orphans of Apollo". World Press. from the original on 21 June 2012. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  21. ^ Foust, Jeff (July 23, 2001). "Preview: Orphans of Apollo". The Space Review. from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  22. ^ Wood, Charlie (29 March 2017). "A 20-mile long 'spacescraper' dangling from an asteroid: Could it work?". Christian Science Monitor. from the original on 31 March 2017.
  23. ^ Cosmo, M. L., Lorenzini, E. C., "Tethers in Space Handbook", NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, 1997, pp. 274-1-274 [clarification needed]
  24. ^ Michel van Pelt (2009). Space Tethers and Space Elevators. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-387-76556-3.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on July 8, 2007. Retrieved 2011-10-06.
  26. ^ NOSS Launch Data 2011-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (see NOSS 2-3, which deployed TiPS)
  27. ^ Ohkawa, Y.; Kawamoto, S.; Nishida, S. I.; Kitamura, S. (2009). "Research and Development of Electrodynamic Tethers for Space Debris Mitigation". Transactions of the Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences, Space Technology Japan. 7: Tr_T2_5 – Tr_2_10. Bibcode:2009TrSpT...7Tr2.5O. doi:10.2322/tstj.7.Tr_2_5.
  28. ^ "Nanotube Fibers". science-wired.blogspot.com. from the original on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  29. ^ Tensile tests of ropes of very long aligned multiwall carbon nanotubes 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^
  31. ^ NASA, TSS-1R Mission Failure Investigation Board, Final Report, May 31, 1996 (accessed 7 April 2011)
  32. ^ Bacon 2005.
  33. ^ a b Specifications for commercially available PBO (Zylon) cable: "PBO (Zylon) The high performance fibre" 2010-11-15 at the Wayback Machine (accessed Oct. 20, 2010)
  34. ^ WO2017031482A1 (U.S. Patent #)
  35. ^ a b "Tether Transport from LEO to the Lunar Surface", R. L. Forward, AIAA Paper 91-2322, 27th Joint Propulsion Conference, 1991 2011-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhooks for the Moon and Mars with Conventional Materials - Hans Moravec
  37. ^ Jillian Scharr, "Space Elevators On Hold At Least Until Stronger Materials Are Available, Experts Say", Huffington Post, May 29, 2013 "Space Elevators on Hold at Least Until Stronger Materials Are Available, Experts Say". HuffPost. 29 May 2013. from the original on 2014-03-02. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  38. ^ "NASA - NASA Engineers, Tennessee College Students Successfully Demonstrate Catch Mechanism for Future Space Tether". from the original on 2010-11-26. Retrieved 2011-03-26. NASA Engineers, Tennessee College Students Successfully Demonstrate Catch Mechanism for Future Space Tether
  39. ^ Tether dynamics 2007-07-17 at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^ Mortari, Daniele (January 2008). "Ultra Long Orbital Tethers Behave Highly Non-Keplerian and Unstable | Daniele Mortari - Academia.edu". from the original on 2017-10-04. Retrieved 2017-11-01. Ultra Long Orbital WSEAS TRANSACTIONS on MATHEMATICS: Tethers Behave Highly Non-Keplerian and Unstable- Daniele Mortari

External links edit

Text edit

  • Tethers Unlimited Incorporated
  • "Tethers In Space Handbook" M. L. Cosmo and E. C. Lorenzini third edition December 1997 2007-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  • NASA IAC report on orbital systems
  • SpaceTethers.com, space tether simulator applet
  • USA National Public Radio - Space Tethers: Slinging Objects in Orbit?
  • ESA - Students test 'space postal service' during Foton mission
  • Robert P. Hoyt discusses space tethers on the Space Show
  • NASA Tether Origami
  • New Scientist article
  • Tether Physics and Survivability Experiment 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tethers Unlimited • Publications 2006-11-10 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tethers in Space, a propellantless propulsion in-orbit demonstration ISBN 978-90-8891-282-5

Video edit

  • Video animation explaining how a tether might work

space, tether, long, cables, which, used, propulsion, momentum, exchange, stabilization, attitude, control, maintaining, relative, positions, components, large, dispersed, satellite, spacecraft, sensor, system, depending, mission, objectives, altitude, spacefl. Space tethers are long cables which can be used for propulsion momentum exchange stabilization and attitude control or maintaining the relative positions of the components of a large dispersed satellite spacecraft sensor system 1 Depending on the mission objectives and altitude spaceflight using this form of spacecraft propulsion is theorized to be significantly less expensive than spaceflight using rocket engines Artist s conception of satellite with a tether Contents 1 Main techniques 2 History 2 1 Missions 3 Types 3 1 Momentum exchange tethers rotating 3 2 Skyhook 3 3 Electrodynamics 3 4 Formation flying 3 5 Universal Orbital Support System 4 Technical difficulties 4 1 Gravitational gradient stabilization 4 2 Atomic oxygen 4 3 Micrometeorites and space junk 4 4 Radiation 5 Construction 5 1 Properties of useful materials 5 2 Practical materials 5 3 Shape 5 3 1 Tapering 5 3 2 Thickness 5 3 3 Mass ratio 5 4 Redundancy 5 5 Material strength 5 6 Cargo capture 5 7 Life expectancy 6 Control and modelling 6 1 Pendular motion instability 6 2 Surges 6 3 Vibrations 6 4 Other issues 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 9 1 Text 9 2 VideoMain techniques editTether satellites might be used for various purposes including research into tether propulsion tidal stabilization and orbital plasma dynamics Five main techniques for employing space tethers are in development 2 3 Electrodynamic tethersMain article Electrodynamic tether Electrodynamic tethers are primarily used for propulsion These are conducting tethers that carry a current that can generate either thrust or drag from a planetary magnetic field in much the same way as an electric motor does Momentum exchange tethersMain article Momentum exchange tether These can be either rotating tethers or non rotating tethers that capture an arriving spacecraft and then release it at a later time into a different orbit with a different velocity Momentum exchange tethers can be used for orbital maneuvering or as part of a planetary surface to orbit orbit to escape velocity space transportation system Tethered formation flyingMain article Tethered formation flying This is typically a non conductive tether that accurately maintains a set distance between multiple space vehicles flying in formation Electric sailMain article Electric sail A form of solar wind sail with electrically charged tethers that will be pushed by the momentum of solar wind ions Universal Orbital Support SystemMain article Universal Orbital Support System A concept for suspending an object from a tether orbiting in space Many uses for space tethers have been proposed including deployment as space elevators as skyhooks and for doing propellant free orbital transfers History editKonstantin Tsiolkovsky 1857 1935 once proposed a tower so tall that it reached into space so that it would be held there by the rotation of Earth However at the time there was no realistic way to build it In 1960 another Russian Yuri Artsutanov wrote in greater detail about the idea of a tensile cable to be deployed from a geosynchronous satellite downwards towards the ground and upwards away keeping the cable balanced 4 This is the space elevator idea a type of synchronous tether that would rotate with the Earth However given the materials technology of the time this too was impractical on Earth In the 1970s Jerome Pearson independently conceived the idea of a space elevator sometimes referred to as a synchronous tether 5 and in particular analyzed a lunar elevator that can go through the L1 and L2 points and this was found to be possible with materials then existing In 1977 Hans Moravec 6 and later Robert L Forward investigated the physics of non synchronous skyhooks also known as rotating skyhooks and performed detailed simulations of tapered rotating tethers that could pick objects off and place objects onto the Moon Mars and other planets with little loss or even a net gain of energy 7 8 In 1979 NASA examined the feasibility of the idea and gave direction to the study of tethered systems especially tethered satellites 1 9 In 1990 Eagle Sarmont proposed a non rotating Orbiting Skyhook for an Earth to orbit orbit to escape velocity Space Transportation System in a paper titled An Orbiting Skyhook Affordable Access to Space 10 11 12 In this concept a suborbital launch vehicle would fly to the bottom end of a Skyhook while spacecraft bound for higher orbit or returning from higher orbit would use the upper end In 2000 NASA and Boeing considered a HASTOL concept where a rotating tether would take payloads from a hypersonic aircraft at half of orbital velocity to orbit 13 Missions edit nbsp Graphic of the US Naval Research Laboratory s TiPS tether satellite Only a small part of the 4 km tether is shown deployed Main article Space tether missions A tether satellite is a satellite connected to another by a space tether A number of satellites have been launched to test tether technologies with varying degrees of success Types editThere are many different and overlapping types of tether Momentum exchange tethers rotating edit Main article Momentum exchange tether Momentum exchange tethers are one of many applications for space tethers Momentum exchange tethers come in two types rotating and non rotating A rotating tether will create a controlled force on the end masses of the system due to centrifugal acceleration While the tether system rotates the objects on either end of the tether will experience continuous acceleration the magnitude of the acceleration depends on the length of the tether and the rotation rate Momentum exchange occurs when an end body is released during the rotation The transfer of momentum to the released object will cause the rotating tether to lose energy and thus lose velocity and altitude However using electrodynamic tether thrusting or ion propulsion the system can then re boost itself with little or no expenditure of consumable reaction mass Skyhook edit Main article Skyhook structure nbsp A rotating and a tidally stabilized skyhook in orbitA skyhook is a theoretical class of orbiting tether propulsion intended to lift payloads to high altitudes and speeds 14 15 16 17 18 Proposals for skyhooks include designs that employ tethers spinning at hypersonic speed for catching high speed payloads or high altitude aircraft and placing them in orbit 19 Electrodynamics edit nbsp Medium close up view captured with a 70 mm camera shows Tethered Satellite System deployment Main article Electrodynamic tether Electrodynamic tethers are long conducting wires such as one deployed from a tether satellite which can operate on electromagnetic principles as generators by converting their kinetic energy to electrical energy or as motors converting electrical energy to kinetic energy 1 Electric potential is generated across a conductive tether by its motion through the Earth s magnetic field The choice of the metal conductor to be used in an electrodynamic tether is determined by a variety of factors Primary factors usually include high electrical conductivity and low density Secondary factors depending on the application include cost strength and melting point An electrodynamic tether was profiled in the documentary film Orphans of Apollo as technology that was to be used to keep the Russian space station Mir in orbit 20 21 Formation flying edit Main article Tethered formation flying This is the use of a typically non conductive tether to connect multiple spacecraft Tethered Experiment for Mars inter Planetary Operations TEMPO is a proposed 2011 clarification needed experiment to study the technique Universal Orbital Support System edit Main article Universal Orbital Support System nbsp Example of a possible layout using the Universal Orbital Support SystemA theoretical type of non rotating tethered satellite system it is a concept for providing space based support to things suspended above an astronomical object 22 The orbital system is a coupled mass system wherein the upper supporting mass A is placed in an orbit around a given celestial body such that it can support a suspended mass B at a specific height above the surface of the celestial body but lower than A Technical difficulties editGravitational gradient stabilization edit nbsp Description of the forces contributing towards maintaining a gravity gradient alignment in a tether systemMain article Gravity gradient stabilization Instead of rotating end for end tethers can also be kept straight by the slight difference in the strength of gravity over their length A non rotating tether system has a stable orientation that is aligned along the local vertical of the earth or other body This can be understood by inspection of the figure on the right where two spacecraft at two different altitudes have been connected by a tether Normally each spacecraft would have a balance of gravitational e g Fg1 and centrifugal e g Fc1 forces but when tied together by a tether these values begin to change with respect to one another This phenomenon occurs because without the tether the higher altitude mass would travel slower than the lower mass The system must move at a single speed so the tether must therefore slow down the lower mass and speed up the upper one The centrifugal force of the tethered upper body is increased while that of the lower altitude body is reduced This results in the centrifugal force of the upper body and the gravitational force of the lower body being dominant This difference in forces naturally aligns the system along the local vertical as seen in the figure 23 Atomic oxygen edit Further information Atomic oxygen Objects in low Earth orbit are subjected to noticeable erosion from atomic oxygen due to the high orbital speed with which the molecules strike as well as their high reactivity This could quickly erode a tether 24 Micrometeorites and space junk edit Simple single strand tethers are susceptible to micrometeoroids and space junk Several systems have since been proposed and tested to improve debris resistance The US Naval Research Laboratory has successfully flown a long term 6 kilometer 3 7 mi long 2 3 millimeter 0 079 0 118 in diameter tether with an outer layer of Spectra 1000 braid and a core of acrylic yarn 25 This satellite the Tether Physics and Survivability Experiment TiPS was launched in June 1996 and remained in operation over 10 years finally breaking in July 2006 26 Robert P Hoyt patented an engineered circular net such that a cut strand s strains would be redistributed automatically around the severed strand This is called a Hoytether Hoytethers have theoretical lifetimes of decades Researchers with JAXA have also proposed net based tethers for their future missions 27 Large pieces of junk would still cut most tethers including the improved versions listed here but these are currently tracked on radar and have predictable orbits Although thrusters could be used to change the orbit of the system a tether could also be temporally wiggled in the right place using less energy to dodge known pieces of junk citation needed Radiation edit Radiation including UV radiation tend to degrade tether materials and reduce lifespan Tethers that repeatedly traverse the Van Allen belts can have markedly lower life than those that stay in low earth orbit or are kept outside Earth s magnetosphere Construction editProperties of useful materials edit nbsp TSS 1R tether composition NASA Tether properties and materials are dependent on the application However there are some common properties To achieve maximum performance and low cost tethers would need to be made of materials with the combination of high strength or electrical conductivity and low density All space tethers are susceptible to space debris or micrometeoroids Therefore system designers will need to decide whether or not a protective coating is needed including relative to UV and atomic oxygen For applications that exert high tensile forces on the tether the materials need to be strong and light Some current tether designs use crystalline plastics such as ultra high molecular weight polyethylene aramid or carbon fiber A possible future material would be carbon nanotubes which have an estimated tensile strength between 140 and 177 GPa 20 3 and 25 7 million psi 1 38 and 1 75 million atm and a proven tensile strength in the range 50 60 GPa 7 3 8 7 million psi 490 000 590 000 atm for some individual nanotubes A number of other materials obtain 10 to 20 GPa 1 5 to 2 9 million psi 99 000 to 197 000 atm in some samples on the nano scale but translating such strengths to the macro scale has been challenging so far with as of 2011 CNT based ropes being an order of magnitude less strong not yet stronger than more conventional carbon fiber on that scale 28 29 30 For some applications the tensile force on the tether is projected to be less than 65 newtons 15 lbf 31 Material selection in this case depends on the purpose of the mission and design constraints Electrodynamic tethers such as the one used on TSS 1R clarification needed may use thin copper wires for high conductivity see EDT There are design equations for certain applications that may be used to aid designers in identifying typical quantities that drive material selection Space elevator equations typically use a characteristic length Lc which is also known as its self support length and is the length of untapered cable it can support in a constant 1 g gravity field Lc srg displaystyle L c frac sigma rho g nbsp where s is the stress limit in pressure units and r is the density of the material Hypersonic skyhook equations use the material s specific velocity which is equal to the maximum tangential velocity a spinning hoop can attain without breaking V sr displaystyle V sqrt frac sigma rho nbsp For rotating tethers rotovators the value used is the material s characteristic velocity which is the maximum tip velocity a rotating untapered cable can attain without breaking Vc 2sr displaystyle V c sqrt frac 2 sigma rho nbsp The characteristic velocity equals the specific velocity multiplied by the square root of two These values are used in equations similar to the rocket equation and are analogous to specific impulse or exhaust velocity The higher these values are the more efficient and lighter the tether can be in relation to the payloads that they can carry Eventually however the mass of the tether propulsion system will be limited at the low end by other factors such as momentum storage Practical materials edit The inclusion of certain items in this list is currently being disputed Please see the relevant discussion on the article s talk page April 2014 Proposed materials include Kevlar ultra high molecular weight polyethylene citation needed carbon nanotubes and M5 fiber M5 is a synthetic fiber that is lighter than Kevlar or Spectra 32 According to Pearson Levin Oldson and Wykes in their article The Lunar Space Elevator an M5 ribbon 30 mm 1 2 in wide and 0 023 mm 0 91 mils thick would be able to support 2 000 kg 4 400 lb on the lunar surface It would also be able to hold 100 cargo vehicles each with a mass of 580 kg 1 280 lb evenly spaced along the length of the elevator 5 Other materials that could be used are T1000G carbon fiber Spectra 2000 or Zylon 33 Potential tether elevator materials 5 Material Density r kg m3 Stress limit s GPa Characteristic length Lc s rg km Specific velocity Vs s r km s Char velocity Vc 2s r km s Single wall carbon nanotubes individual molecules measured 2 266 50 2 200 4 7 6 6Aramid polybenzoxazole PBO fiber Zylon 33 1 340 5 9 450 2 1 3 0Toray carbon fiber T1000G 1 810 6 4 360 1 9 2 7M5 fiber planned values 1 700 9 5 570 2 4 3 3M5 fiber existing 1 700 5 7 340 1 8 2 6Honeywell extended chain polyethylene fiber Spectra 2000 970 3 0 316 1 8 2 5DuPont Aramid fiber Kevlar 49 1 440 3 6 255 1 6 2 2Silicon carbide citation needed 3 000 5 9 199 1 4 2 0Shape edit Tapering edit For gravity stabilized tethers to exceed the self support length the tether material can be tapered so that the cross sectional area varies with the total load at each point along the length of the cable In practice this means that the central tether structure needs to be thicker than the tips Correct tapering ensures that the tensile stress at every point in the cable is exactly the same For very demanding applications such as an Earth space elevator the tapering can reduce the excessive ratios of cable weight to payload weight In lieu of tapering a modular staged tether system maybe used to achieve the same goal Multiple tethers would be used between stages The number of tethers would determine the strength of any given cross section 34 Thickness edit For rotating tethers not significantly affected by gravity the thickness also varies and it can be shown that the area A is given as a function of r the distance from the centre as follows 35 A r Mv2TRedTv22 1 r2R2 displaystyle A r frac Mv 2 TR mathrm e frac delta T frac v 2 2 left 1 frac r 2 R 2 right nbsp where R is the radius of tether v is the velocity with respect to the centre M is the tip mass d displaystyle delta nbsp is the material density and T is the design tensile strength Mass ratio edit nbsp Graph of tether mass to payload ratio versus the tip speed in multiples of the characteristic speed of the materialIntegrating the area to give the volume and multiplying by the density and dividing by the payload mass gives a payload mass tether mass ratio of 35 Mm pdTV22e dTV22 erf dTV22 displaystyle frac M m sqrt pi frac delta T frac V 2 2 mathrm e left frac delta T frac V 2 2 right mathrm erf left sqrt frac delta T frac V 2 2 right nbsp where erf is the normal probability error function Let Vr V Vc displaystyle V r V V c nbsp Vc 2Td displaystyle V c sqrt frac 2T delta nbsp then 36 Mm pVreVr2erf Vr displaystyle frac M m sqrt pi V r mathrm e V r 2 mathrm erf V r nbsp This equation can be compared with the rocket equation which is proportional to a simple exponent on a velocity rather than a velocity squared This difference effectively limits the delta v that can be obtained from a single tether Redundancy edit In addition the cable shape must be constructed to withstand micrometeorites and space junk This can be achieved with the use of redundant cables such as the Hoytether redundancy can ensure that it is very unlikely that multiple redundant cables would be damaged near the same point on the cable and hence a very large amount of total damage can occur over different parts of the cable before failure occurs Material strength edit Beanstalks and rotovators are currently limited by the strengths of available materials Although ultra high strength plastic fibers Kevlar and Spectra permit rotovators to pluck masses from the surface of the Moon and Mars a rotovator from these materials cannot lift from the surface of the Earth In theory high flying supersonic or hypersonic aircraft could deliver a payload to a rotovator that dipped into Earth s upper atmosphere briefly at predictable locations throughout the tropic and temperate zone of Earth As of May 2013 all mechanical tethers orbital and elevators are on hold until stronger materials are available 37 Cargo capture edit Cargo capture for rotovators is nontrivial and failure to capture can cause problems Several systems have been proposed such as shooting nets at the cargo but all add weight complexity and another failure mode At least one lab scale demonstration of a working grapple system has been achieved however 38 Life expectancy edit Currently the strongest materials in tension are plastics that require a coating for protection from UV radiation and depending on the orbit erosion by atomic oxygen Disposal of waste heat is difficult in a vacuum so overheating may cause tether failures or damage Control and modelling editPendular motion instability edit Electrodynamic tethers deployed along the local vertical hanging tethers may suffer from dynamical instability Pendular motion causes the tether vibration amplitude to build up under the action of electromagnetic interaction As the mission time increases this behavior can compromise the performance of the system Over a few weeks electrodynamic tethers in Earth orbit might build up vibrations in many modes as their orbit interacts with irregularities in magnetic and gravitational fields One plan to control the vibrations is to actively vary the tether current to counteract the growth of the vibrations Electrodynamic tethers can be stabilized by reducing their current when it would feed the oscillations and increasing it when it opposes oscillations Simulations have demonstrated that this can control tether vibration citation needed This approach requires sensors to measure tether vibrations which can either be an inertial navigation system on one end of the tether or satellite navigation systems mounted on the tether transmitting their positions to a receiver on the end Another proposed method is to use spinning electrodynamic tethers instead of hanging tethers The gyroscopic effect provides passive stabilisation avoiding the instability Surges edit As mentioned earlier conductive tethers have failed from unexpected current surges Unexpected electrostatic discharges have cut tethers e g see Tethered Satellite System Reflight TSS 1R on STS 75 damaged electronics and welded tether handling machinery It may be that the Earth s magnetic field is not as homogeneous as some engineers have believed Vibrations edit Computer models frequently show tethers can snap due to vibration Mechanical tether handling equipment is often surprisingly heavy with complex controls to damp vibrations The one ton climber proposed by Brad Edwards for his Space Elevator may detect and suppress most vibrations by changing speed and direction The climber can also repair or augment a tether by spinning more strands The vibration modes that may be a problem include skipping rope transverse longitudinal and pendulum 39 Tethers are nearly always tapered and this can greatly amplify the movement at the thinnest tip in whip like ways Other issues edit A tether is not a spherical object and has significant extent This means that as an extended object it is not directly modelable as a point source and this means that the center of mass and center of gravity are not usually colocated Thus the inverse square law does not apply except at large distances to the overall behaviour of a tether Hence the orbits are not completely Keplerian and in some cases they are actually chaotic 40 With bolus designs rotation of the cable interacting with the non linear gravity fields found in elliptical orbits can cause exchange of orbital angular momentum and rotation angular momentum This can make prediction and modelling extremely complex See also edit nbsp Spaceflight portal nbsp Science portal nbsp Science fiction portalSTARS II Spacecraft propulsion Non rocket spacelaunch Orbital ring theoretical artificial ring placed in Earth orbitReferences edit a b c Cosmo M L Lorenzini E C eds December 1998 Tethers In Space Handbook PDF 3rd ed NASA Archived PDF from the original on 29 April 2010 Retrieved 20 October 2010 See also version of NASA MSFC Archived 2011 10 27 at the Wayback Machine available on Scribd Archived 2016 04 21 at the Wayback Machine Finckenor Miria AIAA Technical Committee December 2005 Space Tether Aerospace America 78 Bilen Sven AIAA Technical Committee December 2007 Space Tethers Aerospace America 89 Artsutanov Yuri July 31 1960 V Kosmos na Electrovoze PDF Komsomolskaya Pravda in Russian a b c Pearson Jerome Eugene Levin John Oldson amp Harry Wykes 2005 Lunar Space Elevators for Cislunar Space Development Phase I Final Technical Report PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2016 03 03 The Journal of the Astronautical Sciences v25 4 pp 307 322 Oct Dec 1977 cmu edu Archived from the original on 3 October 2017 Retrieved 3 May 2018 Moravec Hans 1986 Orbital Bridges Retrieved January 8 2023 Hans Moravec Non Synchronous Orbital Skyhooks for the Moon and Mars with Conventional Materials Archived 1999 10 12 at archive today Hans Moravec s thoughts on skyhooks tethers rotovators etc as of 1987 accessed 10 October 2010 Joseph A Carroll and John C Oldson Tethers for Small Satellite Applications Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine presented at the 1995 AIAA USU Small Satellite Conference in Logan Utah United States accessed 20 October 2010 Sarmont Eagle May 26 1990 An Orbiting Skyhook Affordable Access to Space Archived copy Anaheim CA International Space Development Conference Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 Retrieved 2014 02 09 Sarmont Eagle October 1994 How an Earth Orbiting Tether Makes Possible an Affordable Earth Moon Space Transportation System SAE Technical Paper Series Report SAE Technical Paper 942120 Vol 1 doi 10 4271 942120 Archived from the original on 2014 02 22 Retrieved 2014 02 09 Smitherman D V Space Elevators An Advanced Earth Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium NASA CP 2000 210429 1 Thomas J Bogar et al 7 January 2000 Hypersonic Airplane Space Tether Orbital Launch System Phase I Final Report PDF NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts Research Grant No 07600 018 Archived from the original PDF on 24 July 2011 H Moravec A non synchronous orbital skyhook Journal of the Astronautical Sciences vol 25 no 4 pp 307 322 1977 G Colombo E M Gaposchkin M D Grossi and G C Weiffenbach The sky hook a shuttle borne tool for low orbital altitude research Meccanica vol 10 no 1 pp 3 20 1975 M L Cosmo and E C Lorenzini Tethers in Space Handbook NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville Ala USA 3rd edition 1997 L Johnson B Gilchrist R D Estes and E Lorenzini Overview of future NASA tether applications Advances in Space Research vol 24 no 8 pp 1055 1063 1999 E M Levin Dynamic Analysis of Space Tether Missions American Astronautical Society Washington DC USA 2007 Hypersonic Airplane Space Tether Orbital Launch HASTOL System Interim Study Results Archived 2016 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Orphans of Apollo World Press Archived from the original on 21 June 2012 Retrieved 30 January 2013 Foust Jeff July 23 2001 Preview Orphans of Apollo The Space Review Archived from the original on 5 February 2013 Retrieved 30 January 2013 Wood Charlie 29 March 2017 A 20 mile long spacescraper dangling from an asteroid Could it work Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on 31 March 2017 Cosmo M L Lorenzini E C Tethers in Space Handbook NASA Marshall Space Flight Center 1997 pp 274 1 274 clarification needed Michel van Pelt 2009 Space Tethers and Space Elevators Springer Science amp Business Media p 163 ISBN 978 0 387 76556 3 TiPS Missuion Objectives Archived from the original on July 8 2007 Retrieved 2011 10 06 NOSS Launch Data Archived 2011 09 28 at the Wayback Machine see NOSS 2 3 which deployed TiPS Ohkawa Y Kawamoto S Nishida S I Kitamura S 2009 Research and Development of Electrodynamic Tethers for Space Debris Mitigation Transactions of the Japan Society for Aeronautical and Space Sciences Space Technology Japan 7 Tr T2 5 Tr 2 10 Bibcode 2009TrSpT 7Tr2 5O doi 10 2322 tstj 7 Tr 2 5 Nanotube Fibers science wired blogspot com Archived from the original on 1 February 2016 Retrieved 3 May 2018 Tensile tests of ropes of very long aligned multiwall carbon nanotubes Archived 2011 07 22 at the Wayback Machine Tensile Loading of Ropes of Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes and their Mechanical Properties NASA TSS 1R Mission Failure Investigation Board Final Report May 31 1996 accessed 7 April 2011 Bacon 2005 a b Specifications for commercially available PBO Zylon cable PBO Zylon The high performance fibre Archived 2010 11 15 at the Wayback Machine accessed Oct 20 2010 WO2017031482A1 U S Patent a b Tether Transport from LEO to the Lunar Surface R L Forward AIAA Paper 91 2322 27th Joint Propulsion Conference 1991 Archived 2011 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Non Synchronous Orbital Skyhooks for the Moon and Mars with Conventional Materials Hans Moravec Jillian Scharr Space Elevators On Hold At Least Until Stronger Materials Are Available Experts Say Huffington Post May 29 2013 Space Elevators on Hold at Least Until Stronger Materials Are Available Experts Say HuffPost 29 May 2013 Archived from the original on 2014 03 02 Retrieved 2014 04 06 NASA NASA Engineers Tennessee College Students Successfully Demonstrate Catch Mechanism for Future Space Tether Archived from the original on 2010 11 26 Retrieved 2011 03 26 NASA Engineers Tennessee College Students Successfully Demonstrate Catch Mechanism for Future Space Tether Tether dynamics Archived 2007 07 17 at the Wayback Machine Mortari Daniele January 2008 Ultra Long Orbital Tethers Behave Highly Non Keplerian and Unstable Daniele Mortari Academia edu Archived from the original on 2017 10 04 Retrieved 2017 11 01 Ultra Long Orbital WSEAS TRANSACTIONS on MATHEMATICS Tethers Behave Highly Non Keplerian and Unstable Daniele MortariExternal links editText edit ProSEDS a tether based propulsion experiment Special Projects Group NASA tether overview Tethers Unlimited Incorporated Tethers In Space Handbook M L Cosmo and E C Lorenzini third edition December 1997 Archived 2007 10 06 at the Wayback Machine NASA IAC report on orbital systems SpaceTethers com space tether simulator applet USA National Public Radio Space Tethers Slinging Objects in Orbit ESA The YES2 project ESA Students test space postal service during Foton mission The Space Show 531 Robert P Hoyt discusses space tethers on the Space Show NASA site on TSS 1R NASA Tether Origami New Scientist article Tether Physics and Survivability Experiment Archived 2011 07 18 at the Wayback Machine Tethers Unlimited Publications Archived 2006 11 10 at the Wayback Machine Tethers in Space Handbook PDF Tethers in Space a propellantless propulsion in orbit demonstration ISBN 978 90 8891 282 5Video edit Video animation explaining how a tether might work Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Space tether amp oldid 1199970262, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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