The Breakthrough Starshot System Model
Kevin L. G. Parkin

TL;DR
This paper develops a system model for the Starshot project, optimizing design parameters for ultra-fast light-driven nanocrafts aiming for interstellar travel to Alpha Centauri, and evaluates different mission scenarios and costs.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive system model for Starshot, enabling cost-optimized designs for interstellar and solar system missions with detailed engineering and cost analysis.
Findings
Achieves a 0.2c mission with an $8 billion beam director.
Designs a 0.01c solar system precursor with $517 million cost.
Proposes a ground-based test facility costing $5 million.
Abstract
Breakthrough Starshot is an initiative to prove ultra-fast light-driven nanocrafts, and lay the foundations for a first launch to Alpha Centauri within the next generation. Along the way, the project could generate important supplementary benefits to solar system exploration. A number of hard engineering challenges remain to be solved before these missions can become a reality. A system model has been formulated as part of the Starshot systems engineering work. This paper presents the model and describes how it computes cost-optimal point designs. Three point designs are computed: A 0.2 c mission to Alpha Centauri, a 0.01 c solar system precursor mission, and a ground-based test facility based on a vacuum tunnel. All assume that the photon pressure from a 1.06 {\mu}m wavelength beam accelerates a circular dielectric sail. The 0.2 c point design assumes $0.01/W lasers, $500/m…
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