Early Application of Solar-electric Propulsion to a 1-astronomical-unit Out-of-the-ecliptic Mission

Early Application of Solar-electric Propulsion to a 1-astronomical-unit Out-of-the-ecliptic Mission
Author: William C. Strack
Publisher:
Total Pages: 28
Release: 1970
Genre: Electric propulsion
ISBN:

Current technology for solar-electric propulsion is used to assess the potential performance advantages of low-thrust propulsion for an out-of-the-ecliptic mission. Simple normal-to-the-orbit thrust steering is assumed with coast subarcs permitted. The electric spacecraft is launched onto an Earth escape trajectory by an Atlas (SLV3C)-Centaur or a Titan IIIC. Comparisons with a similarly launched uprated Burner II stage reveal that significant performance gains are possible using the electric stage with 250- to 475-day flight times.

Early Application of Solar-electric Propulsion to a 1-astronomical-unit Out-of-the-ecliptic Mission

Early Application of Solar-electric Propulsion to a 1-astronomical-unit Out-of-the-ecliptic Mission
Author: William C. Strack
Publisher:
Total Pages: 21
Release: 1970
Genre: Electric propulsion
ISBN:

Current technology for solar-electric propulsion is used to assess the potential performance advantages of low-thrust propulsion for an out-of-the-ecliptic mission. Simple normal-to-the-orbit thrust steering is assumed with coast subarcs permitted. The electric spacecraft is launched onto an Earth escape trajectory by an Atlas (SLV3C)-Centaur or a Titan IIIC. Comparisons with a similarly launched uprated Burner II stage reveal that significant performance gains are possible using the electric stage with 250- to 475-day flight times.