BowlOfRed
Master Poster
They could send up a small craft that has just a reaction wheel, receiver, and a large clamp to hold it to Kepler.
And plug it into the power socket on the outside of the spacecraft? Or do you give it a separate solar panel?
They could send up a small craft that has just a reaction wheel, receiver, and a large clamp to hold it to Kepler.
Why are we still using spinning wheels?
Seems to me that you could set up fluid loops and pumps to do pointing.
Perhaps a ferrofluid that could be pumped around the loop without moving parts?
It needs to be a flywheel, i.e. to have a constant and large-ish amount of angular momentum. You want to spin it up and let it go. To get sustained angular momentum in a loop of fluid, you'd need a really strong pump, and it'd need to be running all the time.
Actually, as I see it you don't need constant motion.
You can can move a weight and change attitude while it moves, and then stop changing attitude when it stops.
Unless I am not visualizing this problem correctly?
Space-X has something to say about that.
Not mention that NASA have the JWST in the pipeline plus Juno, Dawn , Messenger and New Horizons either in operation or en route.
Kepler was never intended to be serviceable and it has provided a wealth of data and given it ran for better than 3 years it may indeed have even more Earthlike planets waiting to be found.
Perhaps what we need is a ground-based data augmentation effort? An equivalent sensor grid deployed to several places on the planet making a best-effort to cover the field. They will not have full coverage, and they will be hard to calibrate and pointing may not be very good, but that data could be used to inform the analysis of the high quality data taken earlier.
And that's why I'm so glad I've lived into the age of UNmanned space exploration.
How is it too far away? We got it there, didn't we?
Therefore, Kepler was loaded onto an extra booster rocket and launched on an orbit that's drifting farther and farther from the Earth. No day/night temperature swings, no glow from a planet below you, no 90-minute periodicity in cosmic ray exposure, etc.. We do not now and never have had a technology for sending astronauts that far.
JWST will do something similar for similar reasons.
Space-X has something to say about that.
Not with any humans on board, we didn't.
I'll see it when they make it happen.
I'll see it when they make it happen.
I realize it bursts your cynical little bubble but the notion that the Chinese are taking the lead in space technology is pure fantasy.
Their Dragon vehicle could carry humans now if they wore a spacesuit, and life support is almost ready.
This. The big hurdle to US manned spaceflight isn't lifting capacity or finding astronauts willing to brave SpaceX's so-far-unsullied safety record; it's getting NASA to approve anything that wasn't invented in-house via a cost-plus contract to one of the big aerospace firms.
I want to root for NASA, I really do, but all indications suggest they have their heads so far up their asses the next probe they build needs to be sent there to find it again.