1. A review of electrodynamic tethers for science applications
- Author
-
Juan R. Sanmartin
- Subjects
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Whistler ,Magnetosphere ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Aeronáutica ,symbols.namesake ,Optics ,0103 physical sciences ,Langmuir probe ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Physics ,business.industry ,Física ,Plasma ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Computational physics ,Van Allen radiation belt ,Physics::Space Physics ,symbols ,Orbit (dynamics) ,Plasma diagnostics ,business ,Electrodynamic tether - Abstract
A bare electrodynamic tether (EDT) is a conductive thin wire or tape tens of kilometres long, which is kept taut in space by gravity gradient or spinning, and is left bare of insulation to collect (and carry) current as a cylindrical Langmuir probe in an ambient magnetized plasma. An EDT is a probe in mesothermal flow at highly positive (or negative) bias, with a large or extremely large 2D sheath, which may show effects from the magnetic self-field of its current and have electrons adiabatically trapped in its ram front. Beyond technical applications ranging from propellantless propulsion to power generation in orbit, EDTs allow broad scientific uses such as generating electron beams and artificial auroras, exciting Alfven waves and whistlers, modifying the radiation belts and exploring interplanetary space and the Jovian magnetosphere. Asymptotic analysis, numerical simulations, ground and space tests and past and planned missions on EDTs are briefly reviewed.
- Published
- 2009