Combining Magnetic and Electric Sails for Interstellar Deceleration
Nikolaos Perakis, Andreas M. Hein

TL;DR
This paper proposes a novel interstellar deceleration method combining magnetic and electric sails, demonstrating improved performance over individual sails for various mission scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces a combined sail system that leverages the strengths of both magnetic and electric sails, outperforming single-sail configurations in deceleration efficiency.
Findings
Combined sails reduce deceleration time from 40-35 years to 29 years at 5% c.
Sequential operation of both sails outperforms individual sail use.
The combined system influences optimal mission architecture for different spacecraft parameters.
Abstract
The main benefit of an interstellar mission is to carry out in-situ measurements within a target star system. To allow for extended in-situ measurements, the spacecraft needs to be decelerated. One of the currently most promising technologies for deceleration is the magnetic sail which uses the deflection of interstellar matter via a magnetic field to decelerate the spacecraft. However, while the magnetic sail is very efficient at high velocities, its performance decreases with lower speeds. This leads to deceleration durations of several decades depending on the spacecraft mass. Within the context of Project Dragonfly, initiated by the Initiative of Interstellar Studies (i4is), this paper proposes a novel concept for decelerating a spacecraft on an interstellar mission by combining a magnetic sail with an electric sail. Combining the sails compensates for each technologys shortcomings:…
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