For everyone asking why it’s important to neutralize the exhaust, if you don’t then the positively charged Ions will get pulled back towards the spacecraft, and that will result in the thrust being cancelled out. So, it’s essential that the charge on the ions get removed in the process.
I believe you could magnetize the back end of the engine to keep those ions from coming back, but I also believe that you could extend a tube a great many meters behind this and use pulsing magnetic fields to continue accelerating the ions to over 100 thousand kilometers per second. I hear a report recently, may have been Helion, of an ion thruster that uses regular metal as fuel, vaporized as in a plasma cutter and shot out the back with a better thrust and better seconds of impulse. Any news on that?
Solar panels and sensor electronics also like ion bombardment a lot less than than the walls of a thruster, so preventing erosion is also a big concern besides thrust efficiency
Wonderful to hear that "It doesn't match the models, but it works, so we'll just go with that." And the fact that it doesn't match the models means that the models need to be reworked, which means we'll learn cool new stuff.
I'm working on a new model that explains this, and it also happens to explain other phenomena like the estimated size of galaxies recently viewed by JWST. Gonna take a while, but yea, kinda fun.
Its always good to keep in mind that models are usually just simplifications. Even stuff like newtonian physics might be heavily evidence based, but they dont actually seek to understand "why" things happen on a suabtomic level and lower, and thus cant explain some things.
A correction is that the electrons do hit the walls. At 11:53, it is shown that the electrons orbit along the magnetic field lines. And from the thruster illustration, the magnetic field lines do not go around the annulus; the field lines cross the gap radially outwards. This means the electrons are constantly orbiting the field lines and reflecting from each wall of the annulus, this causes erosion in the anode channel. The electrons slowly drift in a circle (but in fact they are bouncing back and forth between the inner and outer wall) due to the hall effect. The hall effect is a side effect, it does not play a critical role in confining the electrons. The mechanism responsible for confining the electrons is the gyration of the electrons about the magnetic field lines. Thus "Hall Effect thruster" is a bit of a misnomer, "Hall thruster" would be more accurate. Regarding the higher mass flow rate of the Hall thruster, this is not really the major mystery. The reason why Hall thrusters can achieve a higher thrust density is because it effectively avoids the space-charge effect. In an ion thruster, the space between the grid only contains positively charged ions. This means there is a critical density where the amount of ions per unit volume is so high they start to repel each other. This prevents scaling the thrust up on a gridded ion thruster without scaling the size. In a Hall thruster, the ions and electrons exist in the same space, so the plasma is effectively quasi-neutral, and the electrons and ions shield each other (sort of) from the space-charge effect. This allows for higher thrust density. However, the mystery lies in how to confine the electrons within the magnetic field effectively. The electrons diffuse out of the magnetic field at a higher rate than expected of classical models, but also slower than other proposed models, so we dont have a complete understanding of the mechanism that allows electrons to escape being trapped by the magnetic field lines.
Thanks for the valuable nuggets of information! Yeah this is exciting to think about... Completely bonkers for me as a layman to imagine the conditions in various points throughout the apparatus, like when and what fraction of atoms would get ionized, and where there is surplus of electrons and where there is not, and what happens with ions that get created late down the road at the exit and dive in backwards... Fascinating that even the manufacturers of the actual thrusters don't possess the theoretical underpinning of what the thing will do but go hey, the proof in the pudding is in the eating.
An interesting consequence of the design of the hall effect thrusters is that they impart a swirl torque on the spacecraft along the axis of the thruster, so spacecraft using hall effect thrusters may need to desaturate inertial attitude control systems (reaction wheels/CMGs) periodically
Normaly you woud solve this by adding a second one spinning the opasite direction. But that would not work because you can't just flip electron rotation around magnetic field ( or something like that)
@@Thefreakyfreek You could mount two some distance apart, angle them very slightly in opposite directions, enough to cancel such a rotation. Thrust vector roll!
I read your comment and was wondering why - when I saw those electrons circling, then it was clear. Solution: 2 thrusters with the coils wound oppositely (or current in opposite direction).
Small correction at time 4:50. If you double the exhaust velocity you quadruple the energy needed per unit reaction mass, but you also double the thrust. So for the same thrust you only need half the reaction mass and double the power. Jon
this - this is why efficient + high power engines can never be a thing - because you have to pay double - once for efficiency and once for thrust, and untll you have a mega-watt power source, you aren't going to be doing mega-newtons of thrust at high isp, and when you run to ultimate limits you discover that even antimatter doesn't have enough energy density to power the rocket if you want to get to a large fraction of the speed of light.
@@andytroo I suppose the main use cases are automated very small vessels - sub-kg minicomputers stuck to a thruster and some solar panels. The other option is beaming energy from a remote source.
@@andytroo Compared to today's engines, they could be possible. Relative to today's, that is. If we get fusion reactors functional and in space, they could create enough power to shove a sufficiently high amount of power into a sufficiently large amount of matter to be both efficient and high power. Again, relative to current ionic engines.
Some years ago I used to work in an inspection lab with a very nice computed tomography system, that is to say a machine built to take 3d x-rays of what was put in there simply speaking and outputting a volume of data that could be analyzed. The customer was aerojet rocketdyne and what I was inspecting was the rear outer rings of hall effect thrusters that were being tested for lifetime limits and erosion is definitely the best way to describe the appearance of the ceramic material. There were straight channels along the direction of thrust I forget how long they were running but for that to happen it was definitely a long time.
@@azmanabdula its a bit hard to describe but the best comparison is its similar to a sloppy water jet cut. like if you used a extremely rough grinding surface in the same spot to the point that it leaves distinct grooves. as was the case they had extremely long runs of consistent wear.
Cool video, thanks! Small correction at 8:04: the gap width has no effect on ion velocity. Only the electric potential/voltage dictates ion velocity, not the distance between the charged grids.
@@colinmaynard2879 the gap distance cancels out. At the same voltage difference between places, the acceleration on the ion becomes larger when the gap becomes smaller. In the end you get velocity v = √(2qU/m), with q and m being the charge and mass of the ion and U being the voltage difference between plates. No gap distance in the equation. Making the gap larger probably has some engineering reasons, but doesn't affect ion velocity.
@@colinmaynard2879 in a conservative field, all that counts is start potential (voltage) and end potential. Ofc, if the acceleration is to too strong, you may start losing energy to bremsstrahlung (photons of all energies)...ofc, photons carry the most momentum per unit energy, so maybe that's a good thing?
Great explanation of Hall Effect Thrusters, I have heard a lot more about ion thrusters previously on ESA missions. Just to add FEEPs (Field Emission Electric Propulsion) may gain in popularity after decades of struggle. The slit FEEPs were actually removed from LISA Pathfinder spacecraft and replaced with a cold gas subsystem previously flight qualified for GAIA. But now various Cubesats are using the Enpulsion supplied needle FEEPs, which hopefully will meet lifetime requirements as there are proposed for missions like the AWS Protoflight model with a total spacecraft mass of about 135kg. So it could be that FEEPs are used for smallest spacecraft and the other electric propulsion technologies for larger satellites.
From the properties quoted, ion-grid thrusters can achieve significant fractions of c for interstellar probes, while hall effect is great for repositioning satellites and impact avoidance .
@@matsv201 lol 100s? you're generous, maybe you forgot a few 0s there! I did the math, and ignoring any relativistic losses should there be any, to reach half of c (which is extremely slow compared to interstellar distances let's not forget that, c is SLOW, half c is DOUBLE slow) it would take around 60 thousand years to reach half of c from standstill and at half c it would take 8 years to reach proxima centauri I can't be bothered to do a differencial equation to calculate what the shortest travel time achievable with it would be, but I expect several tens of thousands of years with the thruster burning 100% of the way yeah ion engines just suck, let's be honest
Scott, I'd like to see a follow up about plasma thrusters. There are designs that do away with electrodes so the erosion problem is avoided. Stuff like helicon and mpd thrusters are cool bits of tech that we could use if space agencies ever considered doing more ambitious missions.
I second this! Things like V A S I M I R Granted in that “Future Rocket Technologies” mod or whatever he covered in a video for KSP 1, he may have mentioned these to an extent, but yeah a dedicated video would be neat!
@Eric Lotze vasimr has the tiny problem of requiring high temp superconductors. But they'd be useful for all thrusters. Side note: my cousin was on the helicon dev team.
Thank you, Scott. Just what I've been waiting for since the announcement of argon thrusters on the new Starlinks. 556 days from clean-sheet to multiple deployed production articles. SpaceX just keeps outshining (and probably dismaying) the competition.
they're basically just magnets at the end of the day, same concept as a coilgun, optimised for a different purpose, any engine that uses either beamed energy reception or nuclear reaction is a lot more sci fi than ion engines, "ion" sounds sci fi but it's just the basic building block of all chemistry, it's just magnetically charged atoms being pushed by a magnetic field, and they chose chemically inert noble gasses because they react with the walls, they sound sci fi, they look sci fi (with their blue or purple glow), but when you get down to it they're very basic and low technology
@@anonymous-rb2sr Magnetic Sails are basically also just magnets at the end of the day. Except applied to the solar sail concept. If you accept the downside of them needing power, they are basically superior to a normal solar sail in just about every other way. Their wind catching area is not limited by the physical shape, but but the fields they produce. I like to describe it as: Solar Sails = the square rigging on many large age of sail ships. Can really only sail downwind. Magnetic Sails = the triangular sails seen on many ships throughout the ages, as well as being the primary sail type used for conventional sailing vessels today. You can sail at various angles due to them being wing-like in that they deflect the wind rather than just being pushed by it. You can even sail into the wind up to a certain angle. Fun fact, a magnetic sail can actually sail closer to directly against the apparent wind angle than an actual naval sail.
Yeah!! Ion source time :D I'm working on electron impact ion source, your videos on ion thrusters are always a good discussion material with my colleagues, thank you for the good work Scott!
Thank you for that explanation of the hall effect. From watching AVE teardowns i knew that the hall effect had to do with magnets and electricity but didnt know what it was
In a CRT, the electrons that shoot out from the gun in the back are easily steered by the coils but any residual stray ions (chlorine, oxygen) tend to fly in a straight line and, if not accounted for, create an ion spot in the middle of the screen. This ties in well with the fact that in Hall effect thrusters, electrons swirl around but the ions just shoot through the magnetic field. I like it when facts from different fields of technology help understand each other.
Bravo Scott Manley for a concise review and explanation of state of the art Electric Propulsion, from an EP expert of 4 decades. I find your description of the devices accurate and meaninful. I am proud to have contributed to several of these at JPL, Aerojet Rocketdyne, and SpaceX.
You want ions to leave roughly at constant speed, carrying your delta impulse. If you emit charged particles, your vehicle will attain the opposite charge and after a while the particles won't leave it anymore due to electrostatic attraction, nullifying thrust.
when i worked at the Redmond rocket factory, i had played a small part building circuit boards for the development program. when i saw a Hall Effect thruster firing in the vacuum chamber, i was gobsmacked watching the future with my own two eyes. blue energy
@@leonfa259 Cathode erosion is the bottleneck for this type of engines now. However, the video is about el. engines, so, as I said, this type is worth mentioning.
I work with very similar technology on a daily basis, but for thin-film optical coatings. We actually use pretty much both types and we also use argon for cost reasons
One clarification: you definitely can build propellant-less electric thruster - the Photon Rocket, but with 1N/3GW of power it's not a particularly practical idea. Still, in theory you could accelerate just by shooting a laser, without any reaction mass involved.
You’d also need to be careful with the photon thruster about heat dissipation (which emits photons), solar panel use (traveling towards a light source acts like a reverse solar sail), and for radioactive power, gamma ray momentum losses.
has this ever been tested in space or not because if not I feel like you're making the mistake of extrapolating things a step too far, so far the two studies that tried to measure the mass of photons both came out with positive results, and we know that photons have inertial mass (they impart a velocity change upon interaction with matter), and gravitational mass (they get affected by gravity in the same way as everything else) now I am fully aware that it's not what einstein says, I'm just saying, if all experiments and all logic points to photons having a small mass... maybe it's worth considering and what better experiment to test that than to put a big flashlight in space, then test it's resistence to change in velocity vector before and after releasing a large ammount of EM radiation because at the end of the day, if we could make a reactionless engine, that would kinda break the universe, even if it takes millions of years to get up to speed, it eventually would, so pardon the skepticism but until it has been properly tested, I won't put blind faith in the word of mathematicians who have a long history of closing their eyes to anything that goes against their nice little theories
An electric thrust engine with no propellant is of course possible, just have an LED and emit light behind you and you'll get thrust. Sure, that thrust will be insanely low and you'll need a way to cool down the LED or have some sort of superconductive LED... but possible and practical are different things of course 😅
I wish you had mentioned Deep Space One which made a lot of the ion thrusters assumptions valid. I remember following that spacecraft at the time, as difficult as that was back when. Great video though.
Hi Scott ! I had the privilege of working for an industrial ion source company started by Dr Kaufman ( & Dr Brown ) here in VA called Commonwealth Scientific in the 90s.... Glad to see you credited him for his contributions to EP systems in US. We made Gridded and HE Sources and Custom Power Supplies for the majority of computer chip, hard drive and surface treatment plants worldwide. I still have a book he wrote ( with his later partner Robinson ) "Operation of Broad Beam Sources" by Kaufman & Robinson sitting on my bookshelf !
This is great! You can almost completely replace the AIAA/IEEE electric propulsion class with this. Can you add another pair of these? One for generic electric propulsion that includes the equation relationships between specific impulse, voltage, thrust and power and a second that covers the other forms of elecitric propulsion? Cover Arcjets (flown), pulsed plasma thrusters (flown), VASIMR and the various cubesat EP systems (you hinted at FEEP, but there are vendors that have flown dozens or hundreds)? Seriously. Having someone that is charismatic like you do this series would make it so I don't have to teach new mission designers anymore.
Bizarrely, the description of how the grids work in the ion thruster and the addition of screens and suppressor grids is precisely the way that audio vacuum tubes (valves) were developed from triodes to tetrodes to pentodes. So my question is this - can I stick four ion thrusters in my Marshall amp?
Alternatively, if you just needed a few more Ns impulse to reach a rescue craft a la Martian and had nothing but your great-grandpa's Fender amp, could you use it to rendez-vous? What guitar tab would be best?
While working on the Deep Space One NSTAR engine, the JPL people asked where I gained my knowledge about Ion engines. I told them I made a few in 1966 from old vacuum tube components.
I've always liked Hg thrusters because they make it easy to have solid propellant, so you only need to vaporize the atoms you need when you need them, right there in the cavity, with no need for pressurized bottles and nozzles.
Thank you so much for such an in depth look at this tech! Super interesting! There is alot of work to come out of Electric Thruster Design in the coming years! Applied Ion Systems has off the shelf products you can buy as a civilian too now!
I always thought plasma thrusters count as electrical thrusters, too. I guess they don't use electric fields as directly as ion thrusters, but what else would you call them?
"I always thought plasma thrusters count as electrical thrusters, too." They do! And they're awesome, the current problem with plasma thrusters is that they get too hot and melt down all known materials, but if we managed to solve the heat issue, they would be WAY better than ion engines Plus the heat management issue is also the thing that is preventing us from using advanced fusion, fission antimater etc engines, so solving that would open the door to truly magnificient engine types
The chart at 13:56 has the "PIT" Ammonia thruster on it. Google told me something surprising; ammonia electric thrusters have flown in space before on test flights but are not Hall Effect or Gridded thrusters. Maybe video that?
Scott, I actually worked for one of Dr Kauffman's companies here in VA called Commonwealth Scientific working with all varieties of ion beams for industrial purposes and research ! Pleased that someone remembers his contributions...
Hey, @scottmanley if you had a 1000 kg spaceship exclusively dedicated to accelerate, that used a mix of solar and nuclear power to fuel the ion thruster (solar panels could be ejected when they became useless, thus reducing total mass) what would be the top speed that it could achieve? If it would it be possible to mix it with gravity assists how much more speed could it get? Could it get somewhere near relativistic speeds before the fuel ran out?
it depends too much on many variables. how heavy the rest of the space ship is, how much is fuel, what kind of engines you have, how much money you're willing to put in, how much time you're willing to wait, etc
@@dabs4270 the ship should be just engine, fuel, solar panels and nuclear RTG, nothing less, nothing more. It should the best engine possible, with no time or money limits. I just want to know what would be theoretically possible
To do this, you would probably want like 90% fuel, 9% RTG, and 1% everything else. Skip the solar panels, run purely on a 50 W RTG, and use a FEEP thruster at a truly ridiculous accelerating voltage, and a truly abysmal thrust level. Say you use 130,000s of ISP and a 90% fuel mass fraction - you have 2.9 million m/s of delta-v. But, with a 50 W powers supply, and 900 kg of fuel, it will take about 950,000 years to fully accelerate. That's way too many half-lives of plutonium for the RTG to continue working - you get like 80 years at best. So, not feasible. But, it gives you a sense - With Xenon,130,000s of ISP only requires like 200,000V of accelerating potential. That's like a decent high-school Van de Graaff generator. Just need a power supply that weighs little enough to make it make sense.
The first experiments in electric propulsion for spaceflight were made in May, 1912, by the Norwegian physicist Kristian Birkeland (most famous for discovering the cause of the Northern Lights). He built and tested it, said to his assistant, "It's nice!", and never published anything. According to Frank Winter, former curator of space at the Smithsonian, Birkeland's vacuum chamber he tested it in, which is now on display in Norway's Teknisk Museum, is the oldest spaceflight artifact in the world.
So, if you had a big fusion reactor and some very large banks of electric thrusters, could you generate some significant thrust? I'm thinking The Expanse.
We can build powerful fission reactors right now that could do all kinds of awesome things in space. Like getting humans around the solar system in amounts of time we could handle. We just don't have the drive to do it yet. That could change in the relatively near future as we learn to gather and use resources in space. If your into this stuff I'd read Delta-v and Critical Mass by Daniel Suarez. They're novels about mining in space and saving the world but are scientifically accurate. Good reads for space nerds.
It's not just the raw power requirements that make ion (or plasma) engines bad for moving humans, but also the efficiency of the parts. If you strap a gigawatt nuclear reactor to one of these engines, you won't be able to funnel all that power into engine thrust. You'll just melt the components.
In theory, you could generate a lot of energy from nuclear fission/fusion which could drive an ion engine, but I doubt it would be better than using the thermal energy to expand a gas and use that. Right now, most energy production from nuclear is via heat, so it is more efficient to use that heat energy to produce kinetic energy than to have efficiency losses by converting it to electrical energy then to kinetic energy.
@@General12th Kinda like changing to a different propellant, it's building a whole new engine. I didnt mean to imply that all we need is huge source of electricity and bam its The Expanse. But there are many different propulsion concepts that become possible when you effectively have a your cities power plant on board. Nuclear Thermal will probably be the first one we'll see that makes Human exploration beyond the Earth Moon system feasable. Or maybe something like the vasimir plasma engine powered by an electricity producing fission reactor. Still have to get rid of waste heat one way or another which can be a real bitch in vacuum. People much smarter than myself will hopefully be stressing over all of this sooner rather than later.
As a Luddite, I must say, this episode was almost understandably descriptive… I love rocket technology and spend way too much time lurking in this space… It’s staggering how much time this tech has been around and I’ve learnt of it now.. Obviously my time in space needs to be accelerated in order to catch up.. 🤣🤣🤣🥰😎
You should look into RF ion thrusters. You basically microwave the propellant until it ionizes and flies out the back. There's at least one example in space at the moment, but I'll leave finding the company as an exercise to the reader.
Finally an explanation of why Xe is so popular. It's always seemed odd to me given that for a fixed ionization state (e.g. +1) the Iₛₚ goes up as the species mass goes down. The explanation here suggests that thrust-per-power dominates over total ∆V as a priority. Hydrogen would make the best fuel, yet again, for max ∆V over very long missions... as long as storing it isn't a major concern. The species I've thought would be an interesting candidate would be Br: it's cheap, light, not horrendously corrosive, has a comparable first ionization energy to Xe and can be stored as a liquid in the structural equivalent of a pop-can.
@@williamduffy1227 the entire Radon content of Earth's atmosphere is less than 1kg and it has a half-life of less than a week. I suspect the logistics alone would rule it out.
Your disclaimer about "pure electric" thrusters still being Science Fiction is exactly why I clicked this video: your title/thumbnail citing "electric thrusters" had me scratching my head, and wondering if I missed the next major spaceflight revolution.
Pure electric engine that works: A magnetic sail. Its like a solar sail, but it uses magnetic fields to redirect solar wind instead of just bouncing it directly off a surface. It has much greater control over the way its thrust is used, and can in theory be used to sail "against the wind." The thrust is, of course, quite low, though possibly a bit better than a normal solar sail. Just make sure you have them at both the aft and the bow (relative to facing at the sun) so you can use them to steer and to cancel out each set of sail's torque. Edit: technically, it does need "fuel." But that fuel is given to it constantly by the local star in the form of solar wind and energy that can be harvested by solar panels that then power the magnetic fields of the sail system (the masts that have the field generators can also double as mounting points for the panels).
I always get alarmed with the abrupt end of Scott's videos, you get used to him talking many interesting things nonstop during a period of time and then suddenly "I'm Scott Manley, fly safe"
(Apologies if duplicate post) The USA tested electric engines using both suborbital missions [SERT-1], and an orbital mission, SERT-2. The latter was launched in 1970 and operated until.....1991! Not continuously of course, but one of the thrusters onboard SERT-2 ran for a total of over 3,700 hours with multiple restarts. In particular, SERT-2 [BTW, the acronym stands for Space, not Solar, Electric Rocket Test] really paved the way for the increasing use of electric propulsion that we are seeing today.
12:28 i wonder if theres some form of resonance that would allow particles to flow progressively faster as burn time goes up maybe explained by the more 'closed loop' nature of hall effect thrusters? the gridded design using a more acceleration-staged method would in theory have a more instantaneous activation therefore have less of a charge gradient and a lower tendency to generate said resonance. im really curious to know the actual answer, hope we find out sometime!
A propelantless electric thruster is a flashlight. It just does not have a lot of thrust. It helps to emphasize: Electric thrusters deliver low thrust and take months to make a difference, but that is perfect for station keeping applications like satellites, that need small orbit corrections with very low onboard propellant masses.
for a posable new type of propellent, you should look at the byproduct of a Rydberg polaritons as it converts into triple or double bonded photons as they have mass and might be able to be used as a propellent and can be generated LOL and get this at first it is traveling at the speed of light and then converts and keeps 10% of its speed and gains mass you don't lose the rubidium as it is held back via a magnetic cooling trap.. so light goes in on one side and converts in to a Rydberg polaritons and as it leaves the cooling field converts to either a triple or double bonded photons with some newly gained mass . and even if it only has a short life that is still time that you can push on it
Great video, as always! I'm wondering, do you know anything about the thruster used by Team Miles on their cubesat, which was launched on the Artemis 1 mission? A video about it would be great.
there've been a couple of interesting developments in moving particles around, lately - re using specialised lasers to shoot particles, and via another study that 'teleported' virtual particles into a test area.
I knew it was magnetic because hall effect sensors are being used in some gaming hardware to remove failure points like the potentiometers in joysticks and give to analogue input to keyboards.
Aside from sci-fi propellent-less thrusters, maybe something more like a reaction wheel without moving parts could be done, to reduce wear and tear. Something like a toroid full of a liquid that could be spun around to create the reaction wheel result, depending on the direction of electricity. Basically a reaction "wheel" that lasts much longer.
You explain that doubling the Isp results in 4x the amount of energy because you double the exhaust velocity. You should also mention that double exhaust velocity automatically means double thrust as well. So for the same thrust, double Isp means double the power consumption, not 4x. In the end, in order to generate thrust, you either consume propellant mass, or electrical power and in a mission design you have to balance those. The key performance parameters of ion thrusters are all linearly linked through: e*P = I*F*g Efficiency[-]*Power[W]= Isp[s]*Thrust[N]*g[m/s2]
In the book Project Hail Mary, they use pure light as a propellent, but generating it is basically black box technology and it takes massive amounts of light to be anywhere useful.
ETs use three types of propulsion: 1) push force using electromagnetic contrarotatory turbines. The Secret Space Program has this one too 2) Generating electrons from the Ether and throwing them at high speed generating a force 3) Changing the vibration of all the particles in the ship to a new vibration, so teleporting the ship
Gridded ion thrusters also stop working completely when a conductive particle gets stuck between the positive and negative grid. If the particle is small, it is possible to melt it without melting the grid, but for larger particles it's EOL. Parts of the engine itself, other parts form the spacecraft, the launch system, space junk and micro meteorites can all be conductive.
Thanks for the insights into electric propulsion. While NASA were focused on more efficient LOX-LH engines and gridded ion thrusters, Elon and his engineers decided to use a kind of Soviet space technology: LOX - kerosene engines and Hall effect thrusters - and they did so with great success. You can call me biased, but, in my opinion, the Soviet and American space tech perfectly complement each other.
Fun fact: An ion thruster was used in the space shuttle in the beginning of the movie "life force" that was based on the books, "the space Vampires " a most bad ass movie BTW
Have you done a video on magnetic sails? I know Zubrin did some work on using a metal wire array to create a sail in which an electric field could be generated and propel the spacecraft by pushing against the solar wind and other ionized atoms in space.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts and ideas. Always interesting and entertaining. Are there any other types of electric rocket engines that could work within the atmosphere. I’m often pondering if the thorium liquid salt reactors can be refined for space use since one of their primary waste products is xenon gas. While powering your way to orbit you might be able to produce your propellant needed for space. Although no expert by a long shot I’m stuck liking the idea that your nuclear fission fuel contains both your energy and propellant in one compact element.
Yeah... got about half way through and realised I don't get a thing you are talking about @Scott Manley. All I am thinking about is that there may be real TIE fighters in space before I die. Cool.
Xenon can be stored as a liquid on a satellite whereas argon will have to be stored as a gas... but maybe the price difference makes up for that. Krypton is probably stored as a gas too anyway.
For everyone asking why it’s important to neutralize the exhaust, if you don’t then the positively charged Ions will get pulled back towards the spacecraft, and that will result in the thrust being cancelled out. So, it’s essential that the charge on the ions get removed in the process.
you forgot about the new electrically throttled solid rockets.
I was just going to ask why the protons have to be neutralised :) thank you !
I believe you could magnetize the back end of the engine to keep those ions from coming back, but I also believe that you could extend a tube a great many meters behind this and use pulsing magnetic fields to continue accelerating the ions to over 100 thousand kilometers per second. I hear a report recently, may have been Helion, of an ion thruster that uses regular metal as fuel, vaporized as in a plasma cutter and shot out the back with a better thrust and better seconds of impulse. Any news on that?
Solar panels and sensor electronics also like ion bombardment a lot less than than the walls of a thruster, so preventing erosion is also a big concern besides thrust efficiency
Literally scrolled down down to ask this, thank you!
Wonderful to hear that "It doesn't match the models, but it works, so we'll just go with that." And the fact that it doesn't match the models means that the models need to be reworked, which means we'll learn cool new stuff.
I'm working on a new model that explains this, and it also happens to explain other phenomena like the estimated size of galaxies recently viewed by JWST. Gonna take a while, but yea, kinda fun.
In what timestamp?
@@raifikarj6698 12:35
Its always good to keep in mind that models are usually just simplifications. Even stuff like newtonian physics might be heavily evidence based, but they dont actually seek to understand "why" things happen on a suabtomic level and lower, and thus cant explain some things.
@@HelenaOfDetroit - Would be very curious about this when your research is completed haha.
A correction is that the electrons do hit the walls. At 11:53, it is shown that the electrons orbit along the magnetic field lines. And from the thruster illustration, the magnetic field lines do not go around the annulus; the field lines cross the gap radially outwards. This means the electrons are constantly orbiting the field lines and reflecting from each wall of the annulus, this causes erosion in the anode channel. The electrons slowly drift in a circle (but in fact they are bouncing back and forth between the inner and outer wall) due to the hall effect. The hall effect is a side effect, it does not play a critical role in confining the electrons. The mechanism responsible for confining the electrons is the gyration of the electrons about the magnetic field lines. Thus "Hall Effect thruster" is a bit of a misnomer, "Hall thruster" would be more accurate.
Regarding the higher mass flow rate of the Hall thruster, this is not really the major mystery. The reason why Hall thrusters can achieve a higher thrust density is because it effectively avoids the space-charge effect. In an ion thruster, the space between the grid only contains positively charged ions. This means there is a critical density where the amount of ions per unit volume is so high they start to repel each other. This prevents scaling the thrust up on a gridded ion thruster without scaling the size. In a Hall thruster, the ions and electrons exist in the same space, so the plasma is effectively quasi-neutral, and the electrons and ions shield each other (sort of) from the space-charge effect. This allows for higher thrust density.
However, the mystery lies in how to confine the electrons within the magnetic field effectively. The electrons diffuse out of the magnetic field at a higher rate than expected of classical models, but also slower than other proposed models, so we dont have a complete understanding of the mechanism that allows electrons to escape being trapped by the magnetic field lines.
Thanks for the valuable nuggets of information!
Yeah this is exciting to think about... Completely bonkers for me as a layman to imagine the conditions in various points throughout the apparatus, like when and what fraction of atoms would get ionized, and where there is surplus of electrons and where there is not, and what happens with ions that get created late down the road at the exit and dive in backwards...
Fascinating that even the manufacturers of the actual thrusters don't possess the theoretical underpinning of what the thing will do but go hey, the proof in the pudding is in the eating.
Excellent comment thank you
An interesting consequence of the design of the hall effect thrusters is that they impart a swirl torque on the spacecraft along the axis of the thruster, so spacecraft using hall effect thrusters may need to desaturate inertial attitude control systems (reaction wheels/CMGs) periodically
Normaly you woud solve this by adding a second one spinning the opasite direction. But that would not work because you can't just flip electron rotation around magnetic field ( or something like that)
@@Thefreakyfreek You could mount two some distance apart, angle them very slightly in opposite directions, enough to cancel such a rotation. Thrust vector roll!
can't they inverse the magnetic field for that ?
Huh, I wonder if a small portion of the thrust could be vectored to counter it? Almost like vernier engines
I read your comment and was wondering why - when I saw those electrons circling, then it was clear.
Solution: 2 thrusters with the coils wound oppositely (or current in opposite direction).
Small correction at time 4:50. If you double the exhaust velocity you quadruple the energy needed per unit reaction mass, but you also double the thrust. So for the same thrust you only need half the reaction mass and double the power.
Jon
this - this is why efficient + high power engines can never be a thing - because you have to pay double - once for efficiency and once for thrust, and untll you have a mega-watt power source, you aren't going to be doing mega-newtons of thrust at high isp, and when you run to ultimate limits you discover that even antimatter doesn't have enough energy density to power the rocket if you want to get to a large fraction of the speed of light.
@@andytroo I suppose the main use cases are automated very small vessels - sub-kg minicomputers stuck to a thruster and some solar panels. The other option is beaming energy from a remote source.
@@andytroo Compared to today's engines, they could be possible. Relative to today's, that is. If we get fusion reactors functional and in space, they could create enough power to shove a sufficiently high amount of power into a sufficiently large amount of matter to be both efficient and high power. Again, relative to current ionic engines.
Jon Garfield died 6 years ago you have to let him go you need to move on
Thank you so much for the ion/hall breakdown! Fascinating content. NASA continues to ignore my resume but thanks to you, KSP is ready to hire me!
Same here! The bribe for the people in charge at the KSP wasn't even that high... 🙂
Some years ago I used to work in an inspection lab with a very nice computed tomography system, that is to say a machine built to take 3d x-rays of what was put in there simply speaking and outputting a volume of data that could be analyzed. The customer was aerojet rocketdyne and what I was inspecting was the rear outer rings of hall effect thrusters that were being tested for lifetime limits and erosion is definitely the best way to describe the appearance of the ceramic material. There were straight channels along the direction of thrust I forget how long they were running but for that to happen it was definitely a long time.
What does it look like?
Like a river bed thats dry?
@@azmanabdula straight and jagged like
@@Chooie6
Isnt that contradictory?
@@azmanabdula its a bit hard to describe but the best comparison is its similar to a sloppy water jet cut. like if you used a extremely rough grinding surface in the same spot to the point that it leaves distinct grooves. as was the case they had extremely long runs of consistent wear.
@@Chooie6
Oh I see
So its like a flat burred surface
Cool video, thanks! Small correction at 8:04: the gap width has no effect on ion velocity. Only the electric potential/voltage dictates ion velocity, not the distance between the charged grids.
Why? Surely the potential gives an acceleration and the longer the ion is undergoing this force the faster it will be travelling at the end?
With higher voltage comes higher distance. Electric Engines follow the spiderman rule😂.
@@colinmaynard2879 the gap distance cancels out. At the same voltage difference between places, the acceleration on the ion becomes larger when the gap becomes smaller. In the end you get velocity
v = √(2qU/m),
with q and m being the charge and mass of the ion and U being the voltage difference between plates. No gap distance in the equation.
Making the gap larger probably has some engineering reasons, but doesn't affect ion velocity.
@@colinmaynard2879 in a conservative field, all that counts is start potential (voltage) and end potential. Ofc, if the acceleration is to too strong, you may start losing energy to bremsstrahlung (photons of all energies)...ofc, photons carry the most momentum per unit energy, so maybe that's a good thing?
@@ProjectPhysX thanks
The Hall effect thruster sounds something straight out of a science fiction book. It is unbelievable that we can build it and it works.
Well the core idea of it is not very different to a particle accelerator, or even a cathode ray
Great explanation of Hall Effect Thrusters, I have heard a lot more about ion thrusters previously on ESA missions. Just to add FEEPs (Field Emission Electric Propulsion) may gain in popularity after decades of struggle. The slit FEEPs were actually removed from LISA Pathfinder spacecraft and replaced with a cold gas subsystem previously flight qualified for GAIA. But now various Cubesats are using the Enpulsion supplied needle FEEPs, which hopefully will meet lifetime requirements as there are proposed for missions like the AWS Protoflight model with a total spacecraft mass of about 135kg. So it could be that FEEPs are used for smallest spacecraft and the other electric propulsion technologies for larger satellites.
Thanks Scott for explaining how these thrusters work and applications.
From the properties quoted, ion-grid thrusters can achieve significant fractions of c for interstellar probes, while hall effect is great for repositioning satellites and impact avoidance .
that is great, in steed of the traveling taking several 100 years... now the acceleration will instead.
@@matsv201 lol 100s? you're generous, maybe you forgot a few 0s there!
I did the math, and ignoring any relativistic losses should there be any, to reach half of c (which is extremely slow compared to interstellar distances let's not forget that, c is SLOW, half c is DOUBLE slow)
it would take around 60 thousand years to reach half of c from standstill
and at half c it would take 8 years to reach proxima centauri
I can't be bothered to do a differencial equation to calculate what the shortest travel time achievable with it would be, but I expect several tens of thousands of years with the thruster burning 100% of the way
yeah ion engines just suck, let's be honest
Scott, I'd like to see a follow up about plasma thrusters. There are designs that do away with electrodes so the erosion problem is avoided. Stuff like helicon and mpd thrusters are cool bits of tech that we could use if space agencies ever considered doing more ambitious missions.
I second this! Things like
V A S I M I R
Granted in that “Future Rocket Technologies” mod or whatever he covered in a video for KSP 1, he may have mentioned these to an extent, but yeah a dedicated video would be neat!
@Eric Lotze vasimr has the tiny problem of requiring high temp superconductors.
But they'd be useful for all thrusters.
Side note: my cousin was on the helicon dev team.
damn, didn’t realize that. Also that’s cool you had someone you knew working on it!
YES PLEASE!!!!
I could listen to you speak all day... something about the way you can get information across is amazing
A man of his word! Scott said he'll make a video on this subject in the last deep space update and he delivered!
Scott I gotta say, your old OG explanation space vids thought me more science than school. Its amazing to see you still going keep it up✌🏼✌🏼
Thank you, Scott. Just what I've been waiting for since the announcement of argon thrusters on the new Starlinks.
556 days from clean-sheet to multiple deployed production articles. SpaceX just keeps outshining (and probably dismaying) the competition.
Starship was supposed to fly to Mars with cargo in 2022, it has yet to reach space...
Ion thrusters have always been one of the very few real technologies that seem truly "SciFi" to me
It probably helps that a lot of SciFi shows use ion thrusters as a plot device.
they're basically just magnets at the end of the day, same concept as a coilgun, optimised for a different purpose, any engine that uses either beamed energy reception or nuclear reaction is a lot more sci fi than ion engines, "ion" sounds sci fi but it's just the basic building block of all chemistry, it's just magnetically charged atoms being pushed by a magnetic field, and they chose chemically inert noble gasses because they react with the walls, they sound sci fi, they look sci fi (with their blue or purple glow), but when you get down to it they're very basic and low technology
@@anonymous-rb2sr Magnetic Sails are basically also just magnets at the end of the day. Except applied to the solar sail concept. If you accept the downside of them needing power, they are basically superior to a normal solar sail in just about every other way. Their wind catching area is not limited by the physical shape, but but the fields they produce.
I like to describe it as:
Solar Sails = the square rigging on many large age of sail ships. Can really only sail downwind.
Magnetic Sails = the triangular sails seen on many ships throughout the ages, as well as being the primary sail type used for conventional sailing vessels today. You can sail at various angles due to them being wing-like in that they deflect the wind rather than just being pushed by it. You can even sail into the wind up to a certain angle. Fun fact, a magnetic sail can actually sail closer to directly against the apparent wind angle than an actual naval sail.
Yeah!! Ion source time :D
I'm working on electron impact ion source, your videos on ion thrusters are always a good discussion material with my colleagues, thank you for the good work Scott!
Thank you for that explanation of the hall effect. From watching AVE teardowns i knew that the hall effect had to do with magnets and electricity but didnt know what it was
Very interesting video. I've worked a lot with ion beam millers using these guns based on the same technology to produce mems.
In a CRT, the electrons that shoot out from the gun in the back are easily steered by the coils but any residual stray ions (chlorine, oxygen) tend to fly in a straight line and, if not accounted for, create an ion spot in the middle of the screen. This ties in well with the fact that in Hall effect thrusters, electrons swirl around but the ions just shoot through the magnetic field. I like it when facts from different fields of technology help understand each other.
Hello from DE.
poggers, on my part aswell
Moin!
Delaware? Germany? Denmark? They all use DE as their abbreviations. Well, Denmark doesn't, but you'd think that they would by way of reasoning.
Bravo Scott Manley for a concise review and explanation of state of the art Electric Propulsion, from an EP expert of 4 decades. I find your description of the devices accurate and meaninful. I am proud to have contributed to several of these at JPL, Aerojet Rocketdyne, and SpaceX.
I second David comment, from a 2.5 decades of EP experience ;)
Really nice to finally see how these work. One question: Why is neutralizing the outflow necessary in these thrusters?
If you don't, the ions may be electrically attracted back to the spacecraft, negating the thrust.
You don't want charge building up on the spacecraft and dragging the ions back.
You want ions to leave roughly at constant speed, carrying your delta impulse. If you emit charged particles, your vehicle will attain the opposite charge and after a while the particles won't leave it anymore due to electrostatic attraction, nullifying thrust.
10:06 made my laugh! Electron „I wanna go there!“ „Eh eh“, answers the magnetic field, „you‘re gonna go sideways!“
when i worked at the Redmond rocket factory, i had played a small part building circuit boards for the development program.
when i saw a Hall Effect thruster firing in the vacuum chamber, i was gobsmacked watching the future with my own two eyes.
blue energy
Great job capturing the salient details of our historically obscure field that is now going mainstream.
Go Blue
Worth mentioning the Magnetoplasmadynamic thruster, which combines both insane Isp and high thrust. It is still experimental, though
Anything that results in high Isp and high thrust uses a lot of power and power is currently the bottleneck.
@@leonfa259 Cathode erosion is the bottleneck for this type of engines now. However, the video is about el. engines, so, as I said, this type is worth mentioning.
Not to be pedantic but it’s more like highER thrust. We’re still talking about millinewtons of thrust here.
I work with very similar technology on a daily basis, but for thin-film optical coatings. We actually use pretty much both types and we also use argon for cost reasons
One clarification: you definitely can build propellant-less electric thruster - the Photon Rocket, but with 1N/3GW of power it's not a particularly practical idea. Still, in theory you could accelerate just by shooting a laser, without any reaction mass involved.
Also, you would vaporize anything that is behind you, with a laser that powerful xD
Well, really you are using energy, as your reaction mass, energy also has mass
@@user-si5fm8ql3c but you don't need to carry a tank with photons or worry they will run out.
You’d also need to be careful with the photon thruster about heat dissipation (which emits photons), solar panel use (traveling towards a light source acts like a reverse solar sail), and for radioactive power, gamma ray momentum losses.
has this ever been tested in space or not
because if not I feel like you're making the mistake of extrapolating things a step too far, so far the two studies that tried to measure the mass of photons both came out with positive results, and we know that photons have inertial mass (they impart a velocity change upon interaction with matter), and gravitational mass (they get affected by gravity in the same way as everything else)
now I am fully aware that it's not what einstein says, I'm just saying, if all experiments and all logic points to photons having a small mass... maybe it's worth considering
and what better experiment to test that than to put a big flashlight in space, then test it's resistence to change in velocity vector before and after releasing a large ammount of EM radiation
because at the end of the day, if we could make a reactionless engine, that would kinda break the universe, even if it takes millions of years to get up to speed, it eventually would, so pardon the skepticism but until it has been properly tested, I won't put blind faith in the word of mathematicians who have a long history of closing their eyes to anything that goes against their nice little theories
Always a treat to see a new video!
An electric thrust engine with no propellant is of course possible, just have an LED and emit light behind you and you'll get thrust. Sure, that thrust will be insanely low and you'll need a way to cool down the LED or have some sort of superconductive LED... but possible and practical are different things of course 😅
I wish you had mentioned Deep Space One which made a lot of the ion thrusters assumptions valid. I remember following that spacecraft at the time, as difficult as that was back when. Great video though.
Brilliant video! I'm very interested in knowing more! Can you please post the sources of the information presented? Thanks! ( Fly safe!) :D
Hi Scott ! I had the privilege of working for an industrial ion source company started by Dr Kaufman ( & Dr Brown ) here in VA called Commonwealth Scientific in the 90s.... Glad to see you credited him for his contributions to EP systems in US. We made Gridded and HE Sources and Custom Power Supplies for the majority of computer chip, hard drive and surface treatment plants worldwide. I still have a book he wrote ( with his later partner Robinson ) "Operation of Broad Beam Sources" by Kaufman & Robinson sitting on my bookshelf !
Yea. Ion engines are so underrated in media. Thank you for the very extensive video about all the variants
Well, Twin Ion Engines are actually very popular in the media! Whole movies feature them prominently! :-)
This is great! You can almost completely replace the AIAA/IEEE electric propulsion class with this. Can you add another pair of these? One for generic electric propulsion that includes the equation relationships between specific impulse, voltage, thrust and power and a second that covers the other forms of elecitric propulsion? Cover Arcjets (flown), pulsed plasma thrusters (flown), VASIMR and the various cubesat EP systems (you hinted at FEEP, but there are vendors that have flown dozens or hundreds)? Seriously. Having someone that is charismatic like you do this series would make it so I don't have to teach new mission designers anymore.
That sounds like… work :)
Bizarrely, the description of how the grids work in the ion thruster and the addition of screens and suppressor grids is precisely the way that audio vacuum tubes (valves) were developed from triodes to tetrodes to pentodes. So my question is this - can I stick four ion thrusters in my Marshall amp?
Alternatively, if you just needed a few more Ns impulse to reach a rescue craft a la Martian and had nothing but your great-grandpa's Fender amp, could you use it to rendez-vous? What guitar tab would be best?
@@spagamoto I'll knock the tops off a few EL34's and contact you from orbit
While working on the Deep Space One NSTAR engine, the JPL people asked where I gained my knowledge about Ion engines. I told them I made a few in 1966 from old vacuum tube components.
@@Spacedog49 There's nothing new that hasn't been forgotten!
Fascinating stuff indeed.
Thanks, Scott!
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
I've always liked Hg thrusters because they make it easy to have solid propellant, so you only need to vaporize the atoms you need when you need them, right there in the cavity, with no need for pressurized bottles and nozzles.
Thank you so much for such an in depth look at this tech! Super interesting! There is alot of work to come out of Electric Thruster Design in the coming years! Applied Ion Systems has off the shelf products you can buy as a civilian too now!
I always thought plasma thrusters count as electrical thrusters, too. I guess they don't use electric fields as directly as ion thrusters, but what else would you call them?
"I always thought plasma thrusters count as electrical thrusters, too."
They do! And they're awesome, the current problem with plasma thrusters is that they get too hot and melt down all known materials, but if we managed to solve the heat issue, they would be WAY better than ion engines
Plus the heat management issue is also the thing that is preventing us from using advanced fusion, fission antimater etc engines, so solving that would open the door to truly magnificient engine types
I love how you have Slack open on your laptop with a link to the Terran 1 Launch Live stream!!!! Awesome!
The chart at 13:56 has the "PIT" Ammonia thruster on it. Google told me something surprising; ammonia electric thrusters have flown in space before on test flights but are not Hall Effect or Gridded thrusters. Maybe video that?
Scott, I actually worked for one of Dr Kauffman's companies here in VA called Commonwealth Scientific working with all varieties of ion beams for industrial purposes and research ! Pleased that someone remembers his contributions...
Hey, @scottmanley if you had a 1000 kg spaceship exclusively dedicated to accelerate, that used a mix of solar and nuclear power to fuel the ion thruster (solar panels could be ejected when they became useless, thus reducing total mass) what would be the top speed that it could achieve? If it would it be possible to mix it with gravity assists how much more speed could it get? Could it get somewhere near relativistic speeds before the fuel ran out?
Wow, you don't ask easy questions!!
it depends too much on many variables. how heavy the rest of the space ship is, how much is fuel, what kind of engines you have, how much money you're willing to put in, how much time you're willing to wait, etc
@@dabs4270 the ship should be just engine, fuel, solar panels and nuclear RTG, nothing less, nothing more. It should the best engine possible, with no time or money limits. I just want to know what would be theoretically possible
Yeah, (when?) could we overtake the Voyagers this way?
To do this, you would probably want like 90% fuel, 9% RTG, and 1% everything else. Skip the solar panels, run purely on a 50 W RTG, and use a FEEP thruster at a truly ridiculous accelerating voltage, and a truly abysmal thrust level. Say you use 130,000s of ISP and a 90% fuel mass fraction - you have 2.9 million m/s of delta-v. But, with a 50 W powers supply, and 900 kg of fuel, it will take about 950,000 years to fully accelerate.
That's way too many half-lives of plutonium for the RTG to continue working - you get like 80 years at best. So, not feasible. But, it gives you a sense - With Xenon,130,000s of ISP only requires like 200,000V of accelerating potential. That's like a decent high-school Van de Graaff generator. Just need a power supply that weighs little enough to make it make sense.
The first experiments in electric propulsion for spaceflight were made in May, 1912, by the Norwegian physicist Kristian Birkeland (most famous for discovering the cause of the Northern Lights). He built and tested it, said to his assistant, "It's nice!", and never published anything. According to Frank Winter, former curator of space at the Smithsonian, Birkeland's vacuum chamber he tested it in, which is now on display in Norway's Teknisk Museum, is the oldest spaceflight artifact in the world.
So, if you had a big fusion reactor and some very large banks of electric thrusters, could you generate some significant thrust? I'm thinking The Expanse.
We can build powerful fission reactors right now that could do all kinds of awesome things in space. Like getting humans around the solar system in amounts of time we could handle. We just don't have the drive to do it yet. That could change in the relatively near future as we learn to gather and use resources in space. If your into this stuff I'd read Delta-v and Critical Mass by Daniel Suarez. They're novels about mining in space and saving the world but are scientifically accurate. Good reads for space nerds.
It's not just the raw power requirements that make ion (or plasma) engines bad for moving humans, but also the efficiency of the parts. If you strap a gigawatt nuclear reactor to one of these engines, you won't be able to funnel all that power into engine thrust. You'll just melt the components.
In theory, you could generate a lot of energy from nuclear fission/fusion which could drive an ion engine, but I doubt it would be better than using the thermal energy to expand a gas and use that. Right now, most energy production from nuclear is via heat, so it is more efficient to use that heat energy to produce kinetic energy than to have efficiency losses by converting it to electrical energy then to kinetic energy.
fusion reactor would be an engine in itself) double-quadruple conversion is pointless
@@General12th Kinda like changing to a different propellant, it's building a whole new engine. I didnt mean to imply that all we need is huge source of electricity and bam its The Expanse. But there are many different propulsion concepts that become possible when you effectively have a your cities power plant on board. Nuclear Thermal will probably be the first one we'll see that makes Human exploration beyond the Earth Moon system feasable. Or maybe something like the vasimir plasma engine powered by an electricity producing fission reactor. Still have to get rid of waste heat one way or another which can be a real bitch in vacuum. People much smarter than myself will hopefully be stressing over all of this sooner rather than later.
Excellent information, great explanations.
Thank you!
As a Luddite, I must say, this episode was almost understandably descriptive…
I love rocket technology and spend way too much time lurking in this space…
It’s staggering how much time this tech has been around and I’ve learnt of it now..
Obviously my time in space needs to be accelerated in order to catch up..
🤣🤣🤣🥰😎
You should look into RF ion thrusters. You basically microwave the propellant until it ionizes and flies out the back. There's at least one example in space at the moment, but I'll leave finding the company as an exercise to the reader.
thats....crazy!!! lol
My favourite thing about these videos is I don't understand most of what's being said, and yet... I still love it, love science and I love spaceeeee
Nicely done Scott, a timely topic that needed discussion. Kudos!
thx Scott, cool topic. stretches my 45 year old EM studies to the max.
Finally an explanation of why Xe is so popular. It's always seemed odd to me given that for a fixed ionization state (e.g. +1) the Iₛₚ goes up as the species mass goes down.
The explanation here suggests that thrust-per-power dominates over total ∆V as a priority. Hydrogen would make the best fuel, yet again, for max ∆V over very long missions... as long as storing it isn't a major concern. The species I've thought would be an interesting candidate would be Br: it's cheap, light, not horrendously corrosive, has a comparable first ionization energy to Xe and can be stored as a liquid in the structural equivalent of a pop-can.
How about Radon? How well would that work?
@@williamduffy1227 the entire Radon content of Earth's atmosphere is less than 1kg and it has a half-life of less than a week. I suspect the logistics alone would rule it out.
Your disclaimer about "pure electric" thrusters still being Science Fiction is exactly why I clicked this video: your title/thumbnail citing "electric thrusters" had me scratching my head, and wondering if I missed the next major spaceflight revolution.
Thanks Scott! This is very educational and extremely interesting.
The best thing about electric thrusters is, that they look super cool
Scot, thanks for the nice explainer and great graphics.
Pure electric engine that works: A magnetic sail. Its like a solar sail, but it uses magnetic fields to redirect solar wind instead of just bouncing it directly off a surface. It has much greater control over the way its thrust is used, and can in theory be used to sail "against the wind." The thrust is, of course, quite low, though possibly a bit better than a normal solar sail.
Just make sure you have them at both the aft and the bow (relative to facing at the sun) so you can use them to steer and to cancel out each set of sail's torque.
Edit: technically, it does need "fuel." But that fuel is given to it constantly by the local star in the form of solar wind and energy that can be harvested by solar panels that then power the magnetic fields of the sail system (the masts that have the field generators can also double as mounting points for the panels).
I always get alarmed with the abrupt end of Scott's videos, you get used to him talking many interesting things nonstop during a period of time and then suddenly "I'm Scott Manley, fly safe"
(Apologies if duplicate post)
The USA tested electric engines using both suborbital missions [SERT-1], and an orbital mission, SERT-2. The latter was launched in 1970 and operated until.....1991! Not continuously of course, but one of the thrusters onboard SERT-2 ran for a total of over 3,700 hours with multiple restarts.
In particular, SERT-2 [BTW, the acronym stands for Space, not Solar, Electric Rocket Test] really paved the way for the increasing use of electric propulsion that we are seeing today.
12:28 i wonder if theres some form of resonance that would allow particles to flow progressively faster as burn time goes up maybe explained by the more 'closed loop' nature of hall effect thrusters? the gridded design using a more acceleration-staged method would in theory have a more instantaneous activation therefore have less of a charge gradient and a lower tendency to generate said resonance. im really curious to know the actual answer, hope we find out sometime!
I remember when JPL used Ion drive for its Deep Impact Mission its first use. And now we have Hall good tech
A propelantless electric thruster is a flashlight. It just does not have a lot of thrust. It helps to emphasize: Electric thrusters deliver low thrust and take months to make a difference, but that is perfect for station keeping applications like satellites, that need small orbit corrections with very low onboard propellant masses.
for a posable new type of propellent, you should look at the byproduct of a Rydberg polaritons as it converts into triple or double bonded photons as they have mass and might be able to be used as a propellent and can be generated LOL and get this at first it is traveling at the speed of light and then converts and keeps 10% of its speed and gains mass you don't lose the rubidium as it is held back via a magnetic cooling trap.. so light goes in on one side and converts in to a Rydberg polaritons and as it leaves the cooling field converts to either a triple or double bonded photons with some newly gained mass . and even if it only has a short life that is still time that you can push on it
Thanks Scott. Another very interesting and informative video!
Purple glowing engines would be cool, and damn the fact their less efficient.
Great video, as always!
I'm wondering, do you know anything about the thruster used by Team Miles on their cubesat, which was launched on the Artemis 1 mission? A video about it would be great.
8:49 "where the action happens" - Scott Manley
there are hundreds of hydrazine propellant Arcjet thrusters flying since 1996, and more to go.
OK, cards on the table I barely understood anything, but man, do these thrusters look cool! Great video, thanks. 😜
Scott, great episode. Nasa Glenn Research in Cleveland, Ohio tests these thrusters. Look at NASA NEXT.
Those videos are sooo interesting I wish u were the one making all of my thermodynamics classes
there've been a couple of interesting developments in moving particles around, lately - re using specialised lasers to shoot particles, and via another study that 'teleported' virtual particles into a test area.
Great video, as always!
"Made as a side product from liquifying air.." I did not know that. But i have thought about it, a lot. Thanks!
I knew it was magnetic because hall effect sensors are being used in some gaming hardware to remove failure points like the potentiometers in joysticks and give to analogue input to keyboards.
Aside from sci-fi propellent-less thrusters, maybe something more like a reaction wheel without moving parts could be done, to reduce wear and tear. Something like a toroid full of a liquid that could be spun around to create the reaction wheel result, depending on the direction of electricity. Basically a reaction "wheel" that lasts much longer.
Thanks Scott!
😎👍👍👍Scott, magnetically spin the drives at relativistic speeds, maybe even use red mercury to get the electrons. Something has to give here.😎✌
Simon Clark has a video up where he's visiting a guy working on Hall Effect thrusters using water as the reaction mass. Fun stuff
You explain that doubling the Isp results in 4x the amount of energy because you double the exhaust velocity. You should also mention that double exhaust velocity automatically means double thrust as well. So for the same thrust, double Isp means double the power consumption, not 4x. In the end, in order to generate thrust, you either consume propellant mass, or electrical power and in a mission design you have to balance those. The key performance parameters of ion thrusters are all linearly linked through:
e*P = I*F*g
Efficiency[-]*Power[W]= Isp[s]*Thrust[N]*g[m/s2]
Thanks, Scott: great episode!
I love to listen to smart people talk about things. The accent really brings it full circle though.
In the book Project Hail Mary, they use pure light as a propellent, but generating it is basically black box technology and it takes massive amounts of light to be anywhere useful.
ETs use three types of propulsion:
1) push force using electromagnetic contrarotatory turbines. The Secret Space Program has this one too
2) Generating electrons from the Ether and throwing them at high speed generating a force
3) Changing the vibration of all the particles in the ship to a new vibration, so teleporting the ship
Gridded ion thrusters also stop working completely when a conductive particle gets stuck between the positive and negative grid. If the particle is small, it is possible to melt it without melting the grid, but for larger particles it's EOL. Parts of the engine itself, other parts form the spacecraft, the launch system, space junk and micro meteorites can all be conductive.
Thanks for the insights into electric propulsion.
While NASA were focused on more efficient LOX-LH engines and gridded ion thrusters, Elon and his engineers decided to use a kind of Soviet space technology: LOX - kerosene engines and Hall effect thrusters - and they did so with great success.
You can call me biased, but, in my opinion, the Soviet and American space tech perfectly complement each other.
I thought it was Rocketdyne that started using Kerosene as part of the REAP program in the early 50's. I know Goddard had tried gasoline.
Fun fact:
An ion thruster was used in the space shuttle in the beginning of the movie "life force" that was based on the books, "the space Vampires " a most bad ass movie BTW
Have you done a video on magnetic sails? I know Zubrin did some work on using a metal wire array to create a sail in which an electric field could be generated and propel the spacecraft by pushing against the solar wind and other ionized atoms in space.
Excellent animations❤
Always answering the questions on my tiny mind.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts and ideas. Always interesting and entertaining. Are there any other types of electric rocket engines that could work within the atmosphere. I’m often pondering if the thorium liquid salt reactors can be refined for space use since one of their primary waste products is xenon gas. While powering your way to orbit you might be able to produce your propellant needed for space. Although no expert by a long shot I’m stuck liking the idea that your nuclear fission fuel contains both your energy and propellant in one compact element.
Impressive stuff!! Thank you
Yeah... got about half way through and realised I don't get a thing you are talking about @Scott Manley.
All I am thinking about is that there may be real TIE fighters in space before I die. Cool.
Shockingly good video, I really got a charge out it.
Xenon can be stored as a liquid on a satellite whereas argon will have to be stored as a gas... but maybe the price difference makes up for that. Krypton is probably stored as a gas too anyway.
2:58 Prettiest thing I've seen today