Even after 30 months in space, The Planetary Society's LightSail 2 mission
continues to successfully "sail on sunbeams," demonstrating solar sail
technology in Earth orbit. The mission is providing hard data for future
missions that hope to employ solar sails to explore the cosmos.
LightSail 2, a small cubesat, launched in June 2019 on a SpaceX Falcon
Heavy, as a demonstration mission to test how well a solar sail could change
the orbit of a spacecraft. A month after launch, when LightSail 2 unfurled
its ultra-thin 32-square-meter Mylar sail, the mission was declared a
success because the sail raised the orbit of the small, loaf-of-bread-sized
spacecraft.
"We're going to a higher orbital altitude without rocket fuel, just with the
push of sunlight," The Planetary Society's (TPS) CEO Bill Nye said at a
press conference following the deployment. "This idea that you could fly a
spacecraft and could get propulsion in space form nothing but photons, it's
surprising, and for me, it's very romantic that you'd be sailing on
sunbeams."
TPS, whose members funded the $7 million mission, said it shares mission
data with NASA to assist three upcoming solar sail missions: NEA Scout,
Solar Cruiser and ACS3. NEA Scout is scheduled to hitch a ride to lunar
space as early as February 2022 on NASA's Space Launch System rocket during
the Artemis I test flight. The mission will use its solar sail to leave the
vicinity of the Moon and visit an asteroid.
Solar sails use the power of photons from the sun to propel spacecraft.
While photons have no mass, they can still transfer a small amount of
momentum. So when photons hit the solar sail, the craft is pushed very
slightly away from the sun. Over time, if a spacecraft is out in space
without any atmosphere to encumber it, it could potentially accelerate to
incredibly high speeds.
A spacecraft with a solar sail wouldn't need to carry fuel and so could
theoretically travel for longer periods of time, as it wouldn't need to
refuel.
But LightSail 2 is in in orbit around the Earth. As the spacecraft swings
its sails into the sunlight, it raises its orbit by as much as few hundred
meters a day. But the small spacecraft doesn't have the means to tilt the
sails precisely enough to prevent lowering its orbit on the other side of
the planet. Eventually, LightSail 2 will dip far into the Earth's atmosphere
to succumb to atmospheric drag. It will deorbit and burn up.
A recent update from TPS says that LightSail 2's altitude above Earth is
currently about 687 kilometers.
"Thanks to optimized sail pointing over time, altitude decay rates during
recent months have been the best of the entire mission," wrote TPS's Jason
Davis. "Thrust even occasionally overcame atmospheric drag, slightly raising
the spacecraft's orbit. Additionally, below-average sun activity has kept
Earth's upper atmosphere thin for much of the mission, creating less drag on
the sail."
But the sun has recently become more active, emitting significant solar
flares. The LightSail 2 team believes that this activity is likely now
causing higher orbital decay rates than those seen earlier in the mission.
However, mission engineers estimate the spacecraft could stay in orbit at
least another year.
And in the meantime, while the spacecraft keeps sending back incredible
pictures from orbit, engineers continue to glean insights that can be passed
along to future missions.