you use the steam to turn a spacetime-fabric-propeller which can gain traction on vacuum itself and propel the ship. simple stuff.
Comment on Science is iterative
janus2@lemmy.zip 1 week ago
ok i can see the steam turbine powering onboard electrical but explain me how the fuck you’re doing space propulsion with steam
huf@hexbear.net 6 days ago
BastingChemina@slrpnk.net 6 days ago
Ion thrusters are an example of electricity used for space propulsion.
In ion thrusters electricity is used to create a magnetic field that accelerate the propellant particles at very high speed. This way the propellant of used much more efficiently.
janus2@lemmy.zip 6 days ago
ooooooh
well that’s pretty neat.
DahGangalang@infosec.pub 6 days ago
So skimming through the wiki article, it sounds like it it’s still “throw something out the back” to generate thrust, which is largely the same problem as the Wall-E with a fire extinguisher problem another commenter made.
Ion Thrusters sound significantly more efficient (in terms of velocity change vs fuel), but do I have the right idea on that?
Tlaloc_Temporal@lemmy.ca 6 days ago
Yes, ion thrusters still use conservation of momentum to generate thrust. They aren’t limited by how fast or how hot we can make something explode though, so we can shove way more energy into the stuff they’re throwing out the back. They’re basically tiny coil/railguns, using electricity to move individual ions really fast.
In terms of efficiency, Ion thrusters are 4 to 40 times better than liquid fueled rockets. The draw back is that ion engines make very little thrust for the mass of the engine.
BastingChemina@slrpnk.net 6 days ago
Yes, just like every new electrical generation method is steam, every new method of propulsion in space is throw something at the back as fast as we can.
The exception being Project Orion. The idea behind project Orion is to constantly drop and explode nuclear bombs behind the spaceship. The explosion of the bomb would then push the spaceship forward.