RF Helicon-based Inductive Plasma Thruster (IPT) Design for an Atmosphere-Breathing Electric Propulsion system (ABEP)
Francesco Romano, Yung-An Chan, Georg Herdrich, Peter C.E., Roberts, C. Traub S. Fasoulas, K. Smith, S. Edmondson, S. Haigh, and N.H. Crisp, V.T. A. Oiko, S.D. Worrall, S. Livadiotti, C., Huyton, L.A. Sinpetru, A. Straker, J. Becedas, R.M. Dom\'inguez, and D. Gonz\'alez

TL;DR
This paper presents the design of an RF helicon-based inductive plasma thruster with a novel birdcage antenna for atmosphere-breathing electric propulsion, aiming to improve efficiency and plasma acceleration for low-altitude space missions.
Contribution
It introduces a new antenna design and implementation for an inductive plasma thruster tailored for ABEP systems, enhancing plasma acceleration and efficiency.
Findings
Successful design and implementation of a birdcage antenna for plasma sources
Potential for increased exhaust velocities and efficiency in ABEP systems
Advancement in RF electrodeless plasma thruster technology
Abstract
Challenging space missions include those at very low altitudes, where the atmosphere is source of aerodynamic drag on the spacecraft. To extend such missions lifetime, an efficient propulsion system is required. One solution is Atmosphere-Breathing Electric Propulsion (ABEP). It collects atmospheric particles to be used as propellant for an electric thruster. The system would minimize the requirement of limited propellant availability and can also be applied to any planet with atmosphere, enabling new mission at low altitude ranges for longer times. Challenging is also the presence of reactive chemical species, such as atomic oxygen in Earth orbit. Such species cause erosion of (not only) propulsion system components, i.e. acceleration grids, electrodes, and discharge channels of conventional EP systems. IRS is developing within the DISCOVERER project, an intake and a thruster for an…
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