Transcript
T9211YUEK7A • A New Way to Launch Spacecrafts Into Orbit | NOVA | PBS
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Kind: captions Language: en since the 1950s Rockets have been our go-to Workhorse for sending people and payloads into orbit they are some of the most complex machines ever built the ultimate boost into the sky but they aren't exactly new even modern rockets have historic routs going back in time some ancient projectiles were powered by chemical explosives like gunpowder in 1232 Chinese soldiers repelled a Mongol Army using flaming arrows likely propelled by simple Rockets today Rockets are far more powerful able to send humans to the moon and the International Space Station solid rocket ignition but Rockets have limitations putting things in orbit is hard it takes a lot of energy Rock are hard they take a lot of energy basically the amount of fuel required for Rockets to reach you know the outer reach of our atmosphere is the limiting factor something like 92 93% of the mass of any rocket is is fuel leaving about five or 6% for the actual structure and only 2% for the payload there is a high demand to put things into space but there are limited means of getting it there but that may soon change if engineers at a company called spin launch can make the dream imagined in this promotional video a reality spin launch is a highly unique way to get to space the idea itself goes back to caveman times it's a sling a sling is an ancient Hunter's weapon it's an improvement on the arm and shoulder's ability to throw a stone archaeologists have found ancient evidence of slings some at least 12,000 years old for Jonathan yany the sling is an inspiration it rotates and at the end of a rotational element you have really really high speed so Jonathan embraced a radical idea use that speed to launch a spacecraft into orbit a sling is something you spin around and basically the more you can spin it the more Force you can basically put on the release of whatever you're slinging out but if you scale this up that same principle has the ability to launch a rocket into orbit that's incredible that idea has been met with skepticism so the spin launch team has much to prove it is one of those ideas that's just sounds too crazy I think it's good to look at things from a place of skepticism uh at the outset but then you have to be objective about looking at well what are the underlying physics and what might really be possible the spin launch team is using electricity to generate rotational speed faster than the speed of sound the proposed payload a satellite encased in a bullet-shaped shell must withstand up to 10,000 G's or 10,000 times the force of Earth's gravity until it is released at just the right moment once the aerrow shell gets around 40 Mi up the casing would separate to allow two small rocket engines to propel the payload the rest of the way to low earth orbit the arm itself that's actually spinning around needs to be able to with understand it to a certain degree as well so you have a need to not only make sure that it's structurally sound but there needs to be Precision in the timing and the programming of that actual release point I don't have any classical training as an engineer I self-educate I read a lot of books lots of books and then I read them again because I didn't really understand them the first time I became an engineer along the way the team's first goal was to build a proof of concept Mass accelerator at 1/8 scale to validate the key Technologies and and use it as a test bed to spin potential spacebound components at many times the force of Earth's gravity also known as as gForce is and uh G represents one unit of Earth gravity when a pilot pulls up on the Yoke of of their Jet and they make a hard turn they'll feel the equivalent of multiple times Earth gravity upwards of hgs for example but spin launch payloads will have to withstand forces orders of magnitude stronger as many as 10,000 G's so the team is working on building and testing components that can survive such extreme acceleration you know in some ways we humans are sort of timid we feel most comfortable with things that look like things we're used to so you can't really tell at the outset whether that thing that you're going that's outlandish is really going to work today the spin launch team is asking a critical question can a payload like a cubat survive 10,000 G's so a cubat is this miniaturization of satellites literally making them into these little Cube components so this 10 cm x 10 cm by 10 cm unit is one piece that can be added on top of each other like Lego blocks so we have some of the most critical subsystems that you would see on any satellite we have a solar cell here it generates a current that charges this battery up and then the battery stores that energy right and distributes it to all of the critical subsystems that require electricity so the OBC or the onboard computer is one of them this is the the brains of the satellite the team is confident the cube as a whole Will Survive but so far they've only tested individual components and never the whole system you know it's a very very common strategy in engineering to say we're going to break this problem into small parts we're going to solve each of the original parts and then we're going to put it back together again the team aims to test some of the components that are typically found on cubesats starting with the computer so this is saying effectively its power rails are all working correctly it looks to be talking to the world just fine so far they know that the battery pack is particularly vulnerable a preest of the battery pack system system didn't make it out of the accelerator in one piece this gave us a great Benchmark when it hit 7,650 GS that it was pretty darn close and we didn't have to do all that much to make it compatible with our launch environment the batteries aren't designed for 10,000 GS native the spin launch engineering team had to figure out how to make the batteries more resistant to the high G forces so this is the original we saw these batteries laying on top of each other the concern there is that when you're on the bottom of the stack you're getting three batteries worth of mass squished on to plus your own Mass y this orientation of the battery cells didn't work out so well in the spinner the g-forces are going this way and you can even see the bolts are embedded and bent into the base here one of the things that we did was turn it sideways right Let each battery support itself and itself only so we're going to fully populate this satellite with all of the key subsystems that we're testing out here this is the pre-spin test of the solar cell 1.2 volts and then after we're done with the test we will check it out again and make sure that it's still getting a similar uh voltage reading this is going to be the first time that this unit with everything in it the battery pack the computer is spinning up to 10,000 GS reaching the acceleration required for launch is itself a difficult engineering problem there we go at those speeds needs friction just from the air would be intense so the inside of the accelerator is actually a giant vacuum chamber if you can pull all of the air out of it then there's no more air resistance and consequently heat on the rotational structure there we go now we're going to go let the the vacuum chamber draw down the pressure and then we can spin up accelerating system [Music] 9,000 1.1 9596 97 98 10,000 10,000 G's coming down diry [Applause] [Music] well look at that I don't hear any rattles looks like it's intact the pressure one feels when you're hoping for success is mostly about the incredible personal human investment that's gone in and not wanting to let down all of your colleagues when the moment of truth comes let's crack it open I'm going to test voltage on the solar cell yeah so 0.8 that's in a reasonable range okay so now we will take out the computer looks like it is intact it's still responding when we send it messages so it looks pretty good I would say that that was a successful test pretty cool woo spin launch has done what Engineers do methodically design test evaluate and repeat as they step their way up to a system big enough to send payloads into low earth [Music] orbit we went to the desert of New Mexico to build a flight test system you know at a large scale that would allow us to essentially prove that we had not only the technology validated we could test our own ability to construct and to execute on a system with this magnitude and scale launching at 1/3 scale was a powerful Milestone spinning the payload to more than 1,000 [Music] mph it was an emotional moment from the team yet you have to have a little bit of Faith to bring something like this to that level and to that that scale we've conducted 10 successful back-to-back flight tests we haven't had a single failure and I think that's a testate to the practicality of the technology this will be for the first time since we've gone to space as a species that we'll be doing it differently it's common for engineers to build on an old technology transforming it with new materials to scale their way to innovation it's with a spinning arm that's throwing satellites into space that's totally new how could that not be exciting