Low-cost precursor of an interstellar mission
Ren\'e Heller (1), Guillem Anglada-Escud\'e (2,3), Michael Hippke, (4,5), Pierre Kervella (6) ((1) Max Planck Institute for Solar System, Research, G\"ottingen (GER), (2) Institut de Ci\`encies de l'Espai,, Bellaterra (ESP), (3) Institut d'Estudis Espacials de Catalunya

TL;DR
This paper proposes using ultra-light aerographite material as a solar sail for interstellar missions, demonstrating its potential to achieve high velocities with low mass and cost, enabling feasible interstellar exploration.
Contribution
It introduces aerographite as a novel, highly efficient material for solar sails, showing its capability for interstellar travel with low mass and cost, and outlines a feasible mission concept.
Findings
Aerographite's density is 0.18 kg/m^3, making it extremely lightweight.
A 1-meter aerographite sphere can reach nearly 6900 km/s and travel to Proxima Centauri in 185 years.
Estimated development cost for prototypes is under 10 million USD.
Abstract
The solar photon pressure provides a viable source of thrust for spacecraft in the solar system. Theoretically it could also enable interstellar missions, but an extremely small mass per cross section area is required to overcome the solar gravity. We identify aerographite, a synthetic carbon-based foam with a density of 0.18 kg/m^3 (15,000 times more lightweight than aluminum) as a versatile material for highly efficient propulsion with sunlight. A hollow aerographite sphere with a shell thickness eps_shl = 1 mm could go interstellar upon submission to the solar radiation in interplanetary space. Upon launch at 1 AU from the Sun, an aerographite shell with eps_shl = 0.5 mm arrives at the orbit of Mars in 60 d and at Pluto's orbit in 4.3 yr. Release of an aerographite hollow sphere, whose shell is 1 micrometer thick, at 0.04 AU (the closest approach of the Parker Solar Probe) results in…
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