SPACE TRAVEL SPACE DAILY SPACE WAR TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY SPACE MART GPS DAILY ENERGY DAILY
  Space Travel News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
"Force Field" Could Keep Lunar Astronauts Safe From Solar Radiation

Artist¿s concept of an electrostatic radiation shield, consisting of positively charged inner spheres and negatively charged outer spheres. The screen net is connected to ground. Image courtesy ASRC Aerospace. See larger image.

Huntsville AL (SPX) Jun 27, 2005
Opposite charges attract. Like charges repel. It's the first lesson of electromagnetism and, someday, it could save the lives of astronauts.

NASA's Vision for Space Exploration calls for a return to the Moon as preparation for even longer journeys to Mars and beyond. But there's a potential showstopper: radiation.

Space beyond low-Earth orbit is awash with intense radiation from the Sun and from deep galactic sources such as supernovas. Astronauts en route to the Moon and Mars are going to be exposed to this radiation, increasing their risk of getting cancer and other maladies. Finding a good shield is important.

The most common way to deal with radiation is simply to physically block it, as the thick concrete around a nuclear reactor does. But making spaceships from concrete is not an option.

(Interestingly, it might be possible to build a moonbase from a concrete mixture of moondust and water, if water can be found on the Moon, but that's another story.) NASA scientists are investigating many radiation-blocking materials such as aluminum, advanced plastics and liquid hydrogen. Each has its own advantages and disadvantages.

Those are all physical solutions. There is another possibility, one with no physical substance but plenty of shielding power: a force field.

Most of the dangerous radiation in space consists of electrically charged particles: high-speed electrons and protons from the Sun, and massive, positively charged atomic nuclei from distant supernovas.

Like charges repel. So why not protect astronauts by surrounding them with a powerful electric field that has the same charge as the incoming radiation, thus deflecting the radiation away?

Many experts are skeptical that electric fields can be made to protect astronauts. But Charles Buhler and John Lane, both scientists with ASRC Aerospace Corporation at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, believe it can be done.

They've received support from the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts, whose job is to fund studies of far-out ideas, to investigate the possibility of electric shields for lunar bases.

"Using electric fields to repel radiation was one of the first ideas back in the 1950s, when scientists started to look at the problem of protecting astronauts from radiation," Buhler says. "They quickly dropped the idea, though, because it seemed like the high voltages needed and the awkward designs that they thought would be necessary (for example, putting the astronauts inside two concentric metal spheres) would make such an electric shield impractical."

Buhler and Lane's approach is different. In their concept, a lunar base would have a half dozen or so inflatable, conductive spheres about 5 meters across mounted above the base. The spheres would then be charged up to a very high static-electrical potential: 100 megavolts or more. This voltage is very large but because there would be very little current flowing (the charge would sit statically on the spheres), not much power would be needed to maintain the charge.

The spheres would be made of a thin, strong fabric (such as Vectran, which was used for the landing balloons that cushioned the impact for the Mars Exploration Rovers) and coated with a very thin layer of a conductor such as gold. The fabric spheres could be folded up for transport and then inflated by simply loading them with an electric charge; the like charges of the electrons in the gold layer repel each other and force the sphere to expand outward.

Placing the spheres far overhead would reduce the danger of astronauts touching them. By carefully choosing the arrangement of the spheres, scientists can maximize their effectiveness at repelling radiation while minimizing their impact on astronauts and equipment at the ground. In some designs, in fact, the net electric field at ground level is zero, thus alleviating any potential health risks from these strong electric fields.

Buhler and Lane are still searching for the best arrangement: Part of the challenge is that radiation comes as both positively and negatively charged particles. The spheres must be arranged so that the electric field is, say, negative far above the base (to repel negative particles) and positive closer to the ground (to repel the positive particles). "We've already simulated three geometries that might work," says Buhler.

Portable designs might even be mounted onto "moon buggy" lunar rovers to offer protection for astronauts as they explore the surface, Buhler imagines.

It sounds wonderful, but there are many scientific and engineering problems yet to be solved. For example, skeptics note that an electrostatic shield on the Moon is susceptible to being short circuited by floating moondust, which is itself charged by solar ultraviolet radiation.

Solar wind blowing across the shield can cause problems, too. Electrons and protons in the wind could become trapped by the maze of forces that make up the shield, leading to strong and unintended electrical currents right above the heads of the astronauts.

The research is still preliminary, Buhler stresses. Moondust, solar wind and other problems are still being investigated. It may be that a different kind of shield would work better, for instance, a superconducting magnetic field. These wild ideas have yet to sort themselves out.

But, who knows, perhaps one day astronauts on the Moon and Mars will work safely, protected by a simple principle of electromagnetism even a child can understand.

Related Links
ASRC Aerospace Corporation
/span> SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

India To Hold Int'l Conference On Planetary Exploration
New Delhi, (XNA) Jun 27, 2005
The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) is hosting twin international conferences on planetary exploration and space law in Bangalore, beginning today (June 27).

   Add to Delicious





Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • L-3 Comms Awarded Global Media Support Contract By US Special Ops Command
  • Asian Tsunami Means Big Sales For Japanese Satellite Phone Service
  • Development Of Alphabus, The New Line Of Platforms For High-Power Satellites
  • aeroTelesis Confirms Hardware Implementation For Breakthrough USM Technology

  • Genomic Sequences Processed In Minutes, Rather Than Weeks
  • IBM And EPFL Join Forces To Uncover The Secrets Of Cognitive Intelligence
  • New Vaccine-Making Facility Opens
  • Gold Nanoparticles May Simplify Cancer Detection

  • NASA Upbeat On Shuttle Launch For mid-July
  • The Folly of Our Age: The Space Shuttle
  • Space Shuttle Discovery Successfully Rolls Back To Launch Pad
  • Discovery's Launchpad Transfer Postponed Until Wednesday

  • Expedition 11 Crew Unpack Care Package
  • No Promise Of Space Station Completion
  • Expedition Eleven Receives Vital Supplies
  • Russian Progress Cargo Ship Launched To ISS

  • BAE Systems Completes Acquisition of United Defense Industries
  • EADS Names New Leaders
  • FAA Using New Lockheed Martin System to Control Oceanic Air Traffic
  • Europe's EADS Woos Pentagon With Alabama Tanker Base

  • Faster Than a Speeding Bullet: Guinness Recognizes NASA Scramjet
  • LockMart Test Fires Second Falcon Small Launch Vehicle Hybrid Motor
  • Russia And USA Plan Joint Development Of Rocket Engines For Flights To Mars
  • NASA Investigates Revolutionary Space Exploration Concepts

  • Russian Telecoms Satellite Launched From Kazakhstan
  • Putin Attacks US Curbs On Russian Space Exports
  • Intelsat Americas IA-8 Launch Successful
  • Russia To Remain On Baikonur Launching Site Until 2050

  • Zinc-Air Batteries Will Extend Mission Times Of NASA Micro Aerial Vehicles
  • Digital Advances Produce Improved Unmanned Aerial Vehicles
  • Predator Provides Close-Air Support To Embattled Marines In Iraq
  • Northrop Grumman's Next-Generation Fire Scout UAV On Track

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement