The Sun Diver: Combining solar sails with the Oberth effect
Coryn A.L. Bailer-Jones (Max Planck Institute for Astronomy,, Heidelberg)

TL;DR
This paper explores optimizing the use of impulses and solar sails to maximize spacecraft velocity at infinity, revealing counter-intuitive strategies depending on impulse thresholds and sail properties.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of impulse distribution strategies combining solar sails with the Oberth effect for enhanced space propulsion.
Findings
Diving close to the Sun with all impulse maximizes velocity above a threshold.
Using all impulse prograde avoids diving when below the threshold.
Combining impulses with solar sails yields unexpected optimal transfer strategies.
Abstract
A highly reflective sail provides a way to propel a spacecraft out of the solar system using solar radiation pressure. The closer the spacecraft is to the Sun when it starts its outward journey, the larger the radiation pressure and so the larger the final velocity. For a spacecraft starting on the Earth's orbit, closer proximity can be achieved via a retrograde impulse from a rocket engine. The sail is then deployed at the closest approach to the Sun. Employing the so-called Oberth effect, a second, prograde, impulse at closest approach will raise the final velocity further. Here I investigate how a fixed total impulse ({\Delta}v) can best be distributed in this procedure to maximize the sail's velocity at infinity. Once {\Delta}v exceeds a threshold that depends on the lightness number of the sail (a measure of its sun-induced acceleration), the best strategy is to use all of the…
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