ELECTRIC ROCKETS AND THE FUTURE OF SATELLITE PROPULSION

17MEIP06_04

06/01/2017

Abstract
Content

Humans have been using rocket propulsion for almost a millennium, starting with Chinese rockets and “fire arrows” in the 13th century and continuing to the modern era's powerful Space Shuttle and Falcon rockets. For most of that history, rockets have been chemically fueled, but in the past century scientists and engineers have also experimented with electric rockets, also known as ion engines or ion propulsion systems.

Rather than using chemical reactions to create heat and accelerate a propellant, electric rockets use electromagnetic or electrostatic fields acting on charged ions of propellant, speeding them up and shooting them out, away from the vehicle, producing thrust. The electrical energy to generate these fields comes from the sun, from batteries, or both.

Meta TagsDetails
Pages
6
Citation
"ELECTRIC ROCKETS AND THE FUTURE OF SATELLITE PROPULSION," Mobility Engineering, June 1, 2017.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 1, 2017
Product Code
17MEIP06_04
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English