>From rec.arts.sf.science
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Subject: tractor beams Greg Benford's day job
From: Dan Goodman <A HREF="mailto:dsgood@;visi.com">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A> 
Date: 11/5/2002 6:41 PM US Mountain Standard Time
Message-id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

*UCI physicist announces plans for satellite to be 'boosted' into orbit
by a microwave beam*

/Special cosmos sail uses earth-bound energy to assist ascent/

*Irvine, Calif., November 4, 2002*

UC Irvine physicist Gregory Benford will announce plans for the first
known attempt to push a spacecraft into the Earth's orbit with energy
beamed up from the ground.

Benford will give details on the unique project at the First
International Symposium on Beamed-Energy Propulsion (ISBEP) Wednesday,
Nov. 6, at the University of Alabama in Huntsville.

The joint UCI-Microwave Sciences Inc. mission will take place next
spring, commencing with the satellite launching from a Russian submarine
off the coast of St. Petersburg. Benford and his brother, James Benford,
the president of Microwave Sciences, will chair two sessions on
microwave-powered propulsion during the symposium. They will also answer
questions about the upcoming mission at a press conference at 5:30 p.m.
CST, on Tuesday, Nov. 5.

The satellite will be called the Cosmos Sail, the first solar-sail craft
to orbit Earth. The Benfords developed the sail with researchers from
the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Made from lightweight layers of
aluminized mylar, the sail will allow a craft to be propelled from low
orbit to high orbit and ultimately into interplanetary space, driven by
microwave energy, similar to the way wind pushes a sailboat across the
sea. By using these electromagnetic waves, spacecraft would burn
significantly less engine fuel?the most prohibitive expense of
interplanetary voyaging.

In describing the launch project, Gregory Benford, a NASA consultant for
the Mars Outpost project, said once the spacecraft is at about 800
kilometers altitude, its sail will be deployed. After the craft is flown
in its first trials, a microwave beam emitted from the Jet Propulsion
Lab's Goldstone 70-meter antennae in California's Mojave Desert will be
used to give the spacecraft an extra push. Instruments on board the
satellite will measure how much the sail accelerates due to the
microwave boost.

While the push received from the Goldstone microwave beam will not be
strong, it will be significant, since the spacecraft's mission is to
test the feasibility of beam-boosted sails.

"The basic ability to move energy and force through space weightlessly
is key to a genuinely 21st century type of spacecraft," Benford said.
"This marks a significant attempt to make space travel more effective
and cost-efficient."

*Press conference information*
The symposium will be in the Bevill Center at The University of Alabama
in Huntsville. The pressroom and the Tuesday night press conference will
be in Bevill Center, room 261. For reporters unable to attend, an
interactive conference-call system with a limited number of outside
lines will be in place. Reporters interested in participating in the
conference call should dial (256) 864-2652 no earlier than 5 p.m. CST.

Additional information about the Cosmos Sail mission will be posted on
the ISBEP Web site: <A HREF="http://urnet.uah.edu/isbep/";>
http://urnet.uah.edu/isbep/</A>.
<http://urnet.uah.edu/isbep/> Other material from the ISBEP program will
also be posted to that Web site.

The complete symposium program schedule, with the names of the
presenters and their topics, is available online at
<A HREF="http://146.229.208.56/Program.html";>
http://146.229.208.56/Program.html</A>. More information about the symposium
is available online at <A HREF="http://lpw.uah.edu/Home.html";>
http://lpw.uah.edu/Home.html</A>.

An artist's rendering of the solar sail in action
<javascript:openWin('image.asp?section=press_release&image_name=
167fig.jpg')>


*Contact*

Phillip Gentry, UA Huntsville
(256) 824-6420
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:gentryp@;uah.edu>

Tom Vasich, UCI
(949) 824-6455
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:tmvasich@;uci.edu>

-------But will it be caring any popcorn?

William Taylor



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