Wind--Pellet Shear Sailing
Jeffrey K. Greason, Dmytro Yakymenko, Mathias N. Larrouturou and, Andrew J. Higgins

TL;DR
The paper proposes a novel interstellar propulsion method called wind-pellet shear sailing, which uses high-velocity pellets and the interstellar medium to accelerate spacecraft efficiently over long distances.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of wind-pellet shear sailing, deriving governing equations, and explores onboard power generation and pellet acceleration techniques for interstellar travel.
Findings
Equations for pellet-to-spacecraft mass ratio derived
Power extraction efficiency is critical for propulsion effectiveness
A mission profile to alpha-Centauri within 30 years is outlined
Abstract
A propulsion concept in which a spacecraft interacts with high-velocity pellets and the interstellar medium is proposed. The pellets are slower than the spacecraft and are accelerated backwards as they are overtaken, imparting a forward acceleration on the spacecraft. This maneuver is possible due to the interaction with a fixed medium (interstellar medium, ISM); as the spacecraft travels through the medium, it is able to extract power from the relative wind. This concept relies upon the relative velocities (shear) between the pellet stream and the fixed medium in order to concentrate the energy of the pellets into the spacecraft and is thus termed wind-pellet shear sailing. The equations governing the mass ratio of pellets to the spacecraft and its dependence on the final spacecraft velocity are derived; the critical role of the efficiency of the power extraction and transfer process…
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