A magnetic sail is a proposed method of spacecraft propulsion where an onboard magnetic field source interacts with a plasma wind (e.g., the solar wind) to form an artificial magnetosphere (similar to Earth's magnetosphere) that acts as a sail, transferring force from the wind to the spacecraft requiring little to no propellant as detailed for each proposed magnetic sail design in this article.
The animation and the following text summarize the magnetic sail physical principles involved. The spacecraft's magnetic field source, represented by the purple dot, generates a magnetic field, shown as expanding black circles. Under conditions summarized in the overview section, this field creates a magnetosphere whose leading edge is a magnetopause and a bow shock composed of captured from the wind by the magnetic field, as shown in blue, which deflects subsequent charged particles from the plasma wind coming from the left.
Specific attributes of the artificial magnetosphere around the spacecraft for a specific design significantly affect performance as summarized in the overview section. A magnetohydrodynamic model (verified by computer simulations and laboratory experiments) predicts that the interaction of the artificial magnetosphere with the oncoming plasma wind creates an effective sail blocking area that transfers force as shown by a sequence of labeled arrows from the plasma wind, to the spacecraft's magnetic field, to the spacecraft's field source, which accelerates the spacecraft in the same direction as the plasma wind.
These concepts apply to all proposed magnetic sail system designs, with the difference how the design generates the magnetic field and how efficiently the field source creates the artificial magnetosphere described above. The History of concept section summarizes key aspects of the proposed designs and relationships between them as background. The cited references are technical with many equations and in order to make the information more accessible, this article first describes in text (and illustrations where available) beginning in the overview section and prior to each design, section or groups of equations and plots intended for the technically oriented reader. The beginning of each proposed design section also contains a summary of the important aspects so that a reader can skip the equations for that design. The differences in the designs determine performance measures, such as the mass of the field source and necessary power, which in turn determine force, mass and hence acceleration and velocity that enable a performance comparison between magnetic sail designs at the end of this article. A comparison with other spacecraft propulsion methods includes some magnetic sail designs where the reader can click on the column headers to compare magnetic sail performance with other propulsion methods. The following observations result from this comparison: magnetic sail designs have insufficient thrust to launch from Earth, thrust (drag) for deceleration for the magsail in the interstellar medium is relatively large, and both the magsail and magnetoplasma sail have significant thrust for travel away from Earth using the force from the solar wind.
History of concept
An overview of many of the magnetic sail proposed designs with illustrations from the references was published in 2018 by Djojodihardjo.
The earliest method proposed by Andrews and Zubrin in 1988,
[D. G. Andrews and R. Zubrin, "Magnetic Sails and Interstellar Travel", Paper IAF-88-553, 1988] dubbed the magsail, has the significant advantage of requiring no propellant and is thus a form of field propulsion that can operate indefinitely. A drawback of the magsail design was that it required a large (50–100 km radius) superconducting loop carrying large currents with a mass on the order of . The magsail design also described modes of operation for interplanetary transfers,
thrusting against a planetary
ionosphere or
magnetosphere,
escape from low Earth orbit
as well as deceleration of an interstellar craft over decades after being initially accelerated by other means, for example. a
fusion rocket, to a significant fraction of light speed,
with a more detailed design published in 2000.
In 2015, Freeland
validated most of the initial magsail analysis, but determined that thrust predictions were optimistic by a factor of 3.1 due to a numerical integration error.
Subsequent designs proposed and analyzed means to significantly reduce mass. These designs require little to modest amounts of exhausted propellant and can thrust for years. All proposed designs describe thrust from solar wind outwards from the Sun. In 2000, Winglee and Slough proposed a Mini-Magnetospheric Plasma Propulsion (M2P2) design that injected low energy plasma into a much smaller coil with much lower mass that required low power. Simulations predicted impressive performance relative to mass and required power; however, a number of critiques raised issues: that the assumed magnetic field falloff rate was optimistic and that thrust was dramatically overestimated.
Starting in 2003, Funaki and others published a series of theoretical, simulation and experimental investigations at JAXA in collaboration with Japanese universities addressing some of the issues from criticisms of M2P2 and named their approach the MagnetoPlasma Sail (MPS). In 2011, Funaki and Yamakawa authored a chapter in a book that is a good reference for magnetic sail theory and concepts. MPS research resulted in many published papers that advanced the understanding of physical principles for magnetic sails. Best performance occurred when the injected plasma had a lower density and velocity than considered in M2P2. Thrust gain was computed as compared with performance with a magnetic field only in 2013 and 2014. Investigations and experiments continued reporting increased thrust experimentally and numerically considering use of a Magnetoplasmadynamic thruster (aka MPD Arc jet in Japan) in 2015, multiple antenna coils in 2019, and a multi-pole MPD thruster in 2020.
Slough published in 2004 and 2006 a method to generate the static magnetic dipole for a magnetic sail in a design called the Plasma magnet (PM) that was described as an AC induction motor turned inside out. A pair of small perpendicularly oriented coils acted as the stator powered by an alternating current to generate a rotating magnetic field (RMF) that analysis predicted and laboratory experiments demonstrated that a current disc formed as the rotor outside the stator. The current disk formed from electrons captured from the plasma wind, therefore requiring little to no plasma injection. Predictions of substantial improvements in terms of reduced coil size (and hence mass) and markedly lower power requirements for significant thrust hypothesized the same optimistic magnetic field falloff rate as assumed for M2P2. In 2022, a spaceflight trial dubbed Jupiter Observing Velocity Experiment (JOVE) proposed using a plasma magnet based sail for a spacecraft named Wind Rider using the solar wind to accelerate away from a point near Earth and decelerate against the magnetosphere of Jupiter.
A 2012, study by Kirtley and Slough investigated using the plasma magnet technology to use plasma in a planetary ionosphere as a braking mechanism and was called the Plasma Magnetoshell. This paper restated the magnetic field falloff rate to the value suggested in the critiques of M2P2 that dramatically reduces analytical predicted performance. Initial missions targeted deceleration in the ionosphere of Mars. Kelly and Little in 2019 published simulation results using a multi-turn coil and not the plasma magnet showed that the magnetoshell was viable for orbital insertion asy Mars, Jupiter, Neptune and Uranus and in 2021 showed that it was more efficient than aerocapture for Neptune.
In 2021, Zhenyu Yang and others published an analysis, numerical calculations and experimental verification for a propulsion system that was a combination of the magnetic sail and the electric sail called an electromagnetic sail. A superconducting magsail coil augmented by an electron gun at the coil's center generates an electric field as in an electric sail that deflects positive ions in the plasma wind thereby providing additional thrust, which could reduce overall system mass.
Overview
The Modes of operation section describes the important parameters of plasma particle density and wind velocity in conjunction with a use case for:
-
Operation in a stellar (e.g., Sun) wind.
-
Deceleration in the interstellar medium (ISM).
-
Operation in a planetary ionosphere or planetary magnetosphere.
The Physical principles section details aspects of how charged particles in a plasma wind interact with a magnetic field and conditions that determine how much thrust force results on the spacecraft in terms of particle's behavior in a plasma wind, as well as the form and magnitude of the magnetic field related to conditions within the magnetosphere that differ for the proposed designs.
such as electrons, protons and ions travel in straight lines in a vacuum in the absence of a magnetic field. As shown in the illustration in the presence of a magnetic field shown in green, charged particles gyrate in circular arcs with blue indicating positively charged particles (e.g., protons) and red indicating electrons. The particle's gyroradius is proportional to the ratio of the particle's momentum (product of mass and velocity) over the magnetic field. At 1 Astronomical Unit (AU), the distance from the Sun to the Earth, the gyroradius of a proton is ~72 km and since a proton is ~1,836 times the mass of an electron, the gyroradius of an electron is ~40 m with the illustration not drawn to scale. For the magsail deceleration in the interstellar medium (ISM) mode of operation the velocity is a significant fraction of light speed, for example 5% c, the gyroradius is ~ 500 km for protons and ~280 m for electrons. When the magsail magnetopause radius is much less than the proton gyroradius the magsail kinematic model by Gros in 2017, which considered only protons, predicts a marked reduction in thrust force for initial ship velocity greater than 10% c prior to deceleration.
When the magnetosphere radius is much greater than the spacecraft's magnetic field source radius, all proposed designs, except for the magsail, use a magnetic dipole approximation for an Amperian loop shown in the center of the illustration with the X indicating current flowing into the page and the dot indicating current flowing out of the page. The illustration shows the resulting magnetic field lines and their direction, where the closer spacing of lines indicates a stronger field. Since the magsail uses a large superconducting coil that has a radius on the same order as the magnetosphere the details of that design use the magsail MHD model employing the Biot–Savart law that predicts stronger magnetic fields near and inside the coil than the dipole model. A Lorentz force occurs only for the portion of a charged particle's velocity at a right angle to the magnetic field lines and this constitutes the magnetic force depicted in the summary animation. Electrically neutral particles, such as neutrons, atoms and molecules are unaffected by a magnetic field.
A condition for applicability of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) theory, which models charged particles as fluid flows, is that to achieve maximum force the radius of the artificial magnetosphere be on the same order as the ion gyroradius for the plasma environment for a particular mode of operation. Another important condition is how the proposed design affects the magnetic field falloff rate inside the magnetosphere, which impacts the field source mass and power requirements. For a radial distance r from the spacecraft's magnetic field source in a vacuum the magnetic field falls off as , where is the falloff rate. Classic magnetic dipole theory covers the case of =3 as used in the magsail design. When plasma is injected and/or captured near the field source, the magnetic field falls off at a rate of , a topic that has been a subject of much research, criticism and differs between designs and has changed over time for the plasma magnet. The M2P2 and plasma magnet designs initially assumed =1 that as shown in numerical examples summarized at the end of the corresponding design sections predicted a very large performance gain. Several researchers independently created a magnetic field model where and asserted that an =2 falloff rate was the best achievable. In 2011 the plasma magnet author changed the falloff rate from 1 to 2 and that is the value used for the plasma magnet for performance comparison in this article. The magnetoplasma sail (MPS) design is an evolution of the M2P2 concept that has been extensively documented, numerically analyzed and simulated and reported a falloff rate between 1.5 and 2.
The falloff rate has a significant impact on performance or the mode of operation accelerating away from the Sun where the mass density of ions in the plasma decreases according to an Inverse-square law with distance from the Sun (e.g., AU) increases. The illustration shows in a semi-log plot the impact of falloff rate on relative force F from Equation versus distance from the Sun ranging from 1 to 20 AU, the approximate distance of Neptune. The distance to Jupiter is approximately 5 AU. Constant force independent of distance from the Sun for =1 is stated in several plasma magnet references, for example Slough and Freeze and results from the effective increase in sail blocking area to exactly offset reduced plasma mass density as a magnetic sail spacecraft accelerates in response to the plasma wind force away from the Sun. As seen from the illustration the impact of falloff rate on force, and therefore acceleration, becomes grerater as distance from the Sun increases.
At scales where the artificial magnetospheric object radius is much less than the ion gyroradius but greater than the electron gyroradius, the realized force is markedly reduced and electrons create force in proportion much greater than their relative mass with respect to ions as detailed in the General kinematic model section where researchers report results from a compute intensive method that simulates individual particle interactions with the magnetic field source.
Modes of operation
Magnetic sail modes of operation cover the mission profile and plasma environment (
pe), such as the
solar wind, (
sw) a planetary ionosphere (
pi) or magnetosphere (
pm), or the interstellar medium (
ism). Symbolically equations in this article use the
pe acronym as a subscript to generic variables, for example as described in this section the plasma mass density
and from the spacecraft point of view the
apparent wind velocity
.
Plasma mass density and velocity terminology and units
A plasma consists exclusively of charged particles that can interact with a magnetic or electric field. It does not include neutral particles, such as neutrons. atoms or molecules.The plasma mass density ρ used in magnetohydrodynamic models only require a weighted average mass density of charged particles that includes neutrons in the ion, while kinematic models use the values for each specific ion type and in some cases the parameters for electrons as well as detailed in the Magnetohydrodynamic model section.
The velocity distribution of ions and electrons is another important parameter but often analyses use only the average velocity for the aggregate of particles in a plasma wind for a particular plasma environment (pe) is . The apparent wind velocity as seen by a spacecraft traveling at velocity (positive meaning acceleration in the same direction as the wind and negative meaning deceleration opposite the wind direction) for a particular plasma environment ( pe) is .
Acceleration/deceleration in a stellar plasma wind
Many designs, analyses, simulations and experiments focus on using a magnetic sail in the
solar wind plasma to accelerate a spacecraft away from the Sun.
Near the Earth's orbit at 1 AU the plasma flows at velocity
dynamically ranges from 250 to 750 km/s (typically 500), with a density ranging from 3 to 10 particles per cubic centimeter (typically 6) as reported by the NOAA real-time solar wind tracking web site
Assuming that 8% of the solar wind is helium and the remainder hydrogen, the average solar wind plasma mass density at 1 AU is
kg/m
3 (typically 10
−20 kg/m
3).
The average plasma mass density of ions decreases according to an Inverse-square law with the distance from the Sun as stated by Andrews/Zubrin and Borgazzi. The velocity for values near the Sun is nearly constant, falling off slowly after 1 AU and then rapidly decreases at heliopause.
Deceleration in interstellar medium (ISM)
A spacecraft accelerated to very high velocities by other means, such as a fusion rocket or laser pushed lightsail, can decelerate even from relativistic velocities without onboard propellant by using a magnetic sail to create thrust (drag) against the interstellar medium plasma environment. As shown in the section on Magsail kinematic model (MKM), feasible uses of this involve maximum velocities below 10% c, taking decades to decelerate, for total travel times on the order of a century as described in the magsail specific designs section.
Only the magsail references consider deceleration in the ISM on approach to Alpha (
) Centauri, which as shown in the figure is separated by the
Local Bubble and the
G-Cloud and the
Solar System, which is moving at velocity
and the local cloud is moving at velocity
. Estimates of the number of protons range between 0.005 and 0.5 cm
−3 resulting in a plasma mass density
kg/m
3, which covers the range used by references in the magsail specific designs section. As summarized in the magsail specific design section, Gros cited references indicating that regions of the G-clouds may be colder and have a low ion density. A typical value assumed for approach to Alpha Centauri is a proton
number density of 0.1 protons per cm
3 corresponding to
kg/m
3.
The spacecraft velocity is much greater than the ISM velocity at the beginning of a deceleration maneuver so the apparent plasma wind velocity from the spacecraft's viewpoint s approximately .
Radio emissions of cyclotron radiation due to interaction of charged particles in the interstellar medium as they spiral around the magnetic field lines of a magnetic sail would have a frequency of approximately kHz. The Earth's ionosphere would prevent detection on the surface, but a space-based antenna could detect such emissions up to several thousands of light years away. Detection of such radiation could indicate activity of advanced extraterrestrial civilizations.
In a planetary ionosphere
A spacecraft approaching a planet with a significant upper atmosphere such as Saturn or Neptune could use a magnetic sail to decelerate by ionizing neutral atoms such that it behaves as a low beta plasma.
The plasma mass in a planetary ionosphere (pi)
is composed of multiple ion types and varies by altitude. The spacecraft velocity
is much greater than the planetary ionosphere velocity in a deceleration maneuver so the apparent plasma wind velocity is approximately
at the beginning of a deceleration maneuver.
In a planetary magnetosphere
Inside or near a planetary
magnetosphere, a magnetic sail can thrust against or be attracted to a planet's
magnetic field created by a
Dynamo theory, especially in an
orbit that passes over the planet's magnetic poles.
When the magnetic sail and planet's magnetic field are in opposite directions an attractive force occurs and when the fields are in the same direction a repulsive force occurs, which is not stable and means to prevent the sail from flipping over is necessary.
The thrust that a magnetic sail delivers within a magnetosphere decreases with the fourth power of its distance from the planet's internal magnetic field. When close to a planet with a strong magnetosphere such as Earth or a gas giant, the magnetic sail could generate more thrust by interacting with the magnetosphere instead of the solar wind. When operating near a planetary or stellar magnetosphere the effect of that magnetic field must be considered if it is on the same order as the gravitational field.
By varying the magnetic sail's field strength and orientation a "perigee kick" can be achieved raising the altitude of the orbit's apogee higher and higher, until the magnetic sail is able to leave the planetary magnetosphere and catch the solar wind. The same process in reverse can be used to lower or circularize the apogee of a magsail's orbit when it arrives at a destination planet with a magnetic field.
In theory, it is possible for a magnetic sail to launch directly from the surface of a planet near one of its magnetic poles, repelling itself from the planet's magnetic field. However, this requires the magnetic sail to be maintained in an "unstable" orientation. Furthermore, the magnetic sail must have extraordinarily strong magnetic fields for a launch from Earth, requiring superconductors supporting 80 times the current density of the best known high-temperature superconductors as of 1991.
In 2022 a spaceflight trial dubbed Jupiter Observing Velocity Experiment (JOVE) proposed using a plasma magnet to decelerate against the magnetosphere of Jupiter.
Physical principles
Physical principles involved include: interaction of magnetic fields with moving charged particles; an artificial magnetosphere model analogous to the Earth's magnetosphere, MHD and kinematic mathematical models for interaction of an artificial magnetosphere with a plasma flow characterized by mass and number density and velocity, and performance measures; such as, force achieved, energy requirements and the mass of the magnetic sail system.
Magnetic field interaction with charged particles
An ion or electron with charge in a plasma moving at velocity in a
magnetic field and
electric field is treated as an idealized point charge in the
Lorentz force . This means that the force on an ion or electron is proportional to the product of their charge and velocity component
perpendicular to the
Magnetic field , in SI units as teslas (T). A magnetic sail design introduces a magnetic field into a plasma flow which under certain conditions deflects the electrons and ions from their original trajectory with the particle's momentum transferred to the sail and hence the spacecraft thereby creating thrust.
An
electric sail uses an electric field that under certain conditions interact with charged particles to create thrust.
Artificial magnetospheric model
The characteristics of the Earth's magnetosphere have been widely studied as a basis for magnetic sails. The figure shows streamlines of charged particles from a plasma wind from the Sun (or a star) or an effective wind when decelerating in the ISM flowing from left to right. A source attached to a spacecraft generates a magnetic field. Under certain conditions at the boundary where magnetic pressure equals the plasma wind kinetic pressure an artificial
bow shock and
magnetopause forms at a characteristic length
from the field source. The ionized plasma wind particles create a
current sheet along the magnetopause, which compresses the magnetic field lines facing the oncoming plasma wind by a factor of 2 at magnetopause as shown in Figure 2a.
The magnetopause deflects charged particles, which affects their streamlines and increases the density at magnetopause. A magnetospheric bubble or cavity forms that has very low density downstream from the magnetopause. Upstream from the magnetopause a
bow shock develops. Simulation results often show the particle density through use of color with an example shown in the legend in the lower left. This figure uses aspects of the general structure from Zubrin,
Toivanen
and Funaki
and aspects of the plasma density from Khazanov
and Cruz.
Magnetohydrodynamic model
Magnetic sail designs operating in a plasma wind share a theoretical foundation based upon a magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) model, sometimes called a fluid model, from plasma physics for an artificially generated
magnetosphere. Under certain conditions, the plasma wind and the magnetic sail are separated by a
magnetopause that blocks the charged particles, which creates a drag force that transfers (at least some) momentum to the magnetic sail, which then applies thrust to the attached spacecraft as described in Andrews/Zubrin,
Cattell,
Funaki,
and Toivanen.
A plasma environment has fundamental parameters, and if a cited reference uses cgs units these should be converted to SI units as defined in the NRL plasma formulary, which this article uses as a reference for plasma parameter units not defined in SI Units. The major parameters for plasma mass density are: the number of ions of type per unit volume the mass of each ion type accounting for isotopes and the number of electrons per unit volume each with electron mass . An average plasma mass density per unit volume for charged particles in a plasma environment ( for stellar wind, for planetary ionosphere, for interstellar medium) is expressed in equation form from magnetohydrodynamics as. Note that this definition includes the mass of neutrons in an ion's nucleus. In SI Units per unit volume is Cubic metre, mass is kilogram (kg), and mass density is kilogram per cubic metre (kg/m3).
The figure depicts the MHD model as described in Funaki and Djojodihardjo. Starting from the left a plasma wind in a plasma environment (e.g., stellar, ISM or an ionosphere) of effective velocity with density encounters a spacecraft with time-varying velocity that is positive if accelerating and negative if decelerating. The apparent plasma wind velocity from the spacecraft's viewpoint is . The spacecraft and field source generate a magnetic field that creates a magnetospheric bubble extending out to a magnetopause preceded by a bow shock that deflects electrons and ions from the plasma wind. At the magnetopause the field source magnetic pressure equals the kinetic pressure of the plasma wind at a standoff shown at the bottom of the figure. The characteristic length is that of a circular sail of effective blocking area where is the effective magnetopause radius. Under certain conditions the plasma wind pushing on the artificial magnetosphere bow shock and magnetopause creates a force on the magnetic field source that is physically attached to the spacecraft so that at least part of the force causes a force on the spacecraft, accelerating it when sailing downwind or decelerating when sailing into a headwind. Under certain conditions and in some designs, some of the plasma wind force may be lost as indicated by on the right side.
All magnetic sail designs assume a standoff between plasma wind pressure and magnetic pressure with SI units of Pascal (Pa, or N/m2) differing only in a constant coefficient as follows:
where is the apparent wind velocity and is the plasma mass density for a specific plasma environment, the magnetic field flux density at magnetopause, μ0 is the vacuum permeability (N A−2) and is a constant that differs by reference as follows for corresponding to modeled as dynamic pressure with no magnetic field compression, for modeled as ram pressure with no magnetic field compression and for modeled as ram pressure with magnetic field compression by a factor of 2 Equation can be solved to yield the required magnetic field that satisfies the pressure balance at magnetopause standoff as:
The force with SI Units of Newtons (N) derived by a magnetic sail for a plasma environment is determined from MHD equations as reported by principal researchers Funaki, Slough, Andrews and Zubrin, and Toivanen as follows:
where is a coefficient of drag determined by numerical analysis and/or simulation, is the wind pressure, and is the effective blocking area of the magnetic sail with magnetopause radius . Note that this equation has the same form as the drag equation in fluid dynamics. is a function of coil attack angle on thrust and steering angle. The power (W) of the plasma wind is the product of velocity and a constant force
where equation was used to derive the right side.
MHD applicability test
As summarized in the overview section, an important condition for a magnetic sail to generate maximum force is that the magnetopause radius be on the order of an ion's radius of gyration. Through analysis, numerical calculation, simulation and experimentation an important condition for a magnetic sail to generate significant force is the MHD applicability test,
which states that the standoff distance
must be significantly greater than the ion
gyroradius, also called the Larmor radius
or cyclotron radius:
where is the ion mass, is the velocity of a particle perpendicular to the magnetic field, is the elementary charge of the ion, is the magnetic field flux density at the point of reference and is a constant that differs by source with and . For example, in the solar wind with 5 ions/cm3 at 1 AU with the proton mass, = 400 km/s, = 36 nT with =0.5 from equation at magnetopause and =2 then 72 km. The MHD applicability test is the ratio . The figure plots on the left vertical axis and lost thrust on the right vertical axis versus the ratio . When , is maximum, at , , a decrease of 25% from the maximum and at , , a 45% decrease. As increases beyond one, decreases meaning less thrust from the plasma wind transfers to the spacecraft and is instead lost to the plasma wind. In 2004, Fujita published numerical analysis using a hybrid PIC simulation using a magnetic dipole model that treated electrons as a fluid and a kinematic model for ions to estimate the coefficient of drag for a magnetic sail operating in the radial orientation resulting in the following approximate formula:The lost thrust is .
Coil attack angle effect on thrust and steering angle
In 2005 Nishida and others published results from numerical analysis of an MHD model for interaction of the solar wind with a magnetic field of current flowing in a coil that momentum is indeed transferred to the magnetic field produced by field source and hence to the spacecraft.
Thrust force derives from the momentum change of the solar wind, pressure by the solar wind on the magnetopause from equation and Lorentz force from currents induced in the magnetosphere interacting with the field source. The results quantified the coefficient of drag, steering (i.e., thrust direction) angle with the solar wind, and torque generated as a function of attack angle (i.e., orientation) The figure illustrates how the attack (or coil tilt) angle
orientation of the coil creates a steering angle for the thrust vector and also torque imparted to the coil. Also shown is the vector for the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF), which at 1 AU varies with waves and other disturbances in the solar wind, known as
space weather, and can significantly increase or decrease the thrust of a magnetic sail.
[ The Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF), Space Weather Live. Retrieved 11 February 2020.]
For a coil with radial orientation (like a Frisbee) the attack angle = 0° and with axial orientation (like a parachute) =90°. The Nishida 2005 results reported a coefficient of drag that increased non-linearly with attack angle from a minimum of 3.6 at =0 to a maximum of 5 at =90°. The steering angle of the thrust vector is substantially less than the attack angle deviation from 45° due to the interaction of the magnetic field with the solar wind. Torque increases from = 0° from zero at to a maximum at =45° and then decreases to zero at =90°. A number of magnetic sail design and other papers cite these results. In 2012 Kajimura reported simulation results that covered two cases where MHD applicability occurs with =1.125 and where a kinematic model is applicable =0.125 to compute a coefficient of drag and steering angle. As shown in Figure 4 of that paper when MHD applicability occurs the results are similar in form to Nishida 2005 where the largest occurs with the coil in an axial orientation. However, when the kinematic model applies, the largest occurs with the coil in a radial orientation. The steering angle is positive when MHD is applicable and negative when a kinematic model applies. The 2012 Nishida and Funaki published simulation results for a coefficient of drag , coefficient of lift and a coefficient of moment for a coil radius of =100 km and magnetopause radius =500 km at 1 AU.
Magnetic field model
In a design, either the magnetic field source strength or the magnetopause radius
the characteristic length must be chosen. A good approximation from Cattell
and Toivanen
for a magnetic field falloff rate
for a distance
from the field source to magnetopause starts with the equation:
where is the magnetic field at a radius near the field source that falls off near the source as as follows:
where is a constant multiplying the magnetic moment to make match a target value at . When far from the field source, a magnetic dipole is a good approximation and choosing the above value of with =2 near the field source was used by Andrews and Zubrin.
The Amperian loop model for the magnetic moment is , where is the current in Ampere and is the surface area for a coil (loop) of radius . Assuming that and substituting the expression for the magnetic moment into equation yields the following:
When the magnetic field flux density is specified, substituting from the pressure balance analysis from equation into the above and solving for yields the following:
This is the expression for when with and and is the same form as the magnetopause distance of the Earth. Equation shows directly how a decreased falloff rate dramatically increases the effective sail area for a given field source magnetic moment and determined from the pressure balance equation . Substituting this into equation yields the plasma wind force as a function of falloff rate , plasma density , coil radius , coil current and plasma wind velocity as follows:
using equation for and equation for . This is the same expression as equation (10b) when and and and the right hand side from equation (20) specifically applied to M2P2 with other numerical coefficients grouped into the term. Note that force increases as falloff rate decreases. For the solar wind case, substituting into and using the function for the solar wind plasma mass density , with the distance from the sun in Astronomical units (AU) results in the following expression: where , the effective sail blocking area.
This equation explicitly shows the relationship upon solar wind plasma mass density as a function of distance from the Sun . For the case =1 the expansion of the magnetopause radius exactly matches the decreasing value of exactly as the distance from the Sun increases, resulting in constant force and hence constant acceleration inside the heliosphere. Note that includes the term , which means that as increases that the magnetic field near the field source must increase to maintain the same force as compared with a smaller value of . The example in the overview section set =1, =1, =1, and =1 so that the force at =1 was equal to 1 for all values of at 1 AU.
General kinematic model
When the MHD applicability test of
<1 then a kinematic simulation model more accurately predicts force transferred from the plasma wind to the spacecraft. In this case the effective sail blocking area
<
.
The left axis of the figure is for plots of magnetic sail force versus characteristic length
. The solid black line plots the MHD model force
from equation . The green line shows the value of ion gyroradius
72 km at 1 AU from equation . The dashed blue line plots the hybrid MHD/kinematic model from equation from Fujita04.
The red dashed line plots a curve fit to simulation results from Ashida14.
Although a good fit for these parameters, the curve fit range of this model does not cover some relevant examples. Additional simulation results from Hajiwara15
are shown for the MHD and kinematic model as single data points as indicated in the legend. These models are all in close agreement. The kinematic models predict less force than predicted by the MHD model. In other words, the fraction
of thrust force predicted by the MHD model is lost when
as plotted on the right axis. The solid blue and red lines show
for Fujita04
and Ashida18
respectively, indicating that operation with
less than 10% of
will have significant loss. Other factors in a specific magnetic sail design may offset this loss for values of