Space Power is about the generation of power from space.
The space around Earth is filled with intense sunlight, undiffused by atmosphere, continuously. It represents an inexhausible supply of energy that can be converted to electricity using semiconductors - that is without the use of any moving parts.
A small fraction of this energy could supply a large part of the world's future energy requirements for the foreseeable future. In addition, it could do it without the need for any kind of fuel, and without producing any waste product.
All that's needed is large-area collectors - and that means large, thousands of square kilometers - and a way to transmit the collected power down to Earth. Several different methods are possible, but the one that has received the most effort so far is the use of microwave beams or wireless power transmission.To receive announcements and news of updates by email, subscribe to the sf-announce mailing list.
Join the sf-discuss mailing list to ask questions and talk about space tourism, vehicles, power, and habitats.
More InfoHere are some key documents from the archive to get you started:
1968 |
Peter Glaser |
1978-81 |
US
Department of Energy |
1981 |
US
DOE |
1982 |
Space Energy Engineering Division established at Institute of
Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS |
1983 | Japanese engineers fly sounding rocket experiment to test microwave transmission through the ionosphere - "MINIX". |
1985 |
"
SPS |
1991 |
"
SPS |
1992 |
"SPS 2000 |
"
SPS | |
1993 |
METS International Conference on Wireless Power Transmission (
WPT |
1994 |
March, Session on
SPS |
September, SPS 2000 | |
November,
WPT | |
1995 |
March, SPS 2000 |
NASA | |
September, "Space solar power: an advanced concepts study project" published by NASA | |
October, 2nd International Wireless Power Transmission Conference (WPT2) held at Kobe University. | |
SPS 2000 | |
December, "Equatorial Times | |
1996 |
March, SPS 2000 |
Session on space power held at "Space 96" in Albuquerque | |
Phase 1 Report of "Fresh Look" study delivered to NASA | |
September, Two sessions on energy from space at
International Symposium on Antennas and Propagation | |
October, SPS 2000 | |
1997 |
Proceedings of
WPT |
March, SPS 2000 | |
April, NASA | |
August,
SPS | |
1998 |
September, SPS 2000 |
September 27 - October 2, Meeting of
IAF | |
2007 | June, The Space Frontier Foundation creates a new public forum for space solar power, as does the Space Solar Alliance for Future Energy. |
October, U.S. Department of Defense, National Security Space Office publishes interim assessment of space solar power: |