Asteroid hopper mines water for steam-powered space travel
US researchers have developed a prototype asteroid hopper spacecraft that transforms water into steam, theoretically allowing it to travel indefinitely.
Known as WINE (World Is Not Enough), the microwave-sized vehicle could potentially be used to explore space for valuable minerals, launching between asteroids and other bodies with weak gravity. Its design was developed by Phil Metzger, a planetary research scientist from the University of Central Florida, with the prototype built by Honeybee Robotics of Pasadena, California. The project is part of NASA’s Small Business Technology Transfer programme.
“WINE was designed to never run out of propellant so exploration will be less expensive,” said Metzger. “It also allows us to explore in a shorter amount of time, since we don’t have to wait for years as a new spacecraft travels from Earth each time.”
At the heart of WINE is an In Situ Resource Utilisation (ISRU) system that captures and extracts water which is stored in a steam thruster tank. To convert the water into a steam propellant, the asteroid hopper uses heat generated by its electronics system with additional power coming from solar charged batteries. For more distant exploration where minimal solar power is available, small radioisotopic decay units could be used to power the vehicle’s mining.
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