The Effects of Radiation Pressure on Orbiting Mirrors with Non-Zero Eccentricity

Authors

  • Hannah Marie Bechtel University of Wisconsin - La Crosse

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17307/wsc.v1i1.339

Keywords:

Mirrors, Radiation Pressure, Orbits

Abstract

The search for extraterrestrial life has been approached from many angles. For Korpela, et al, among others, the search comes in the form of analyzing stars’ light curves for hints of satellites around exoplanets. Such satellites could be in the form of large, thin, lightweight mirrors, possibly used to redirect sunlight from a star to the surface of a planet. The feasibility and fuel efficiency of such an undertaking would depend heavily on the effects of radiation pressure. My colleagues and I have simulated those satellites using REBOUND (Rein and Liu 2012), an N-body simulator, to understand the effect of radiation pressure on mirrors orbiting an exoplanet. We changed the types of stars, initial orbit orientations, eccentricities, and other variables. Each simulation ran to a pre-set 1000 orbits or until the mirror crashed into the planet or escaped orbit. A list of survival times and other data trends was compiled to identify potentially stable (or quasi-stable) orbits. Overall, it appeared that simulations with initial eccentricity close to zero (0.1, sometimes 0.3) were more like previously investigated initially circular simulations. There were extreme exceptions to this however; some of the initially eccentric simulations lasted for 1000 orbits, while the equivalent initially circular simulations crashed or escaped very early on. We also used the data output from the simulations to create plots like a mirror’s distance from the planet over time and a mirror’s eccentricity over time in order to find possible stability trends. We are still investigating potentially stable configurations.

Author Biography

Hannah Marie Bechtel, University of Wisconsin - La Crosse

Student at UWL studying physics with an emphasis in astronomy

References

Korpela, E. J., Sallmen, S. M., and Greene, D. (2015). Modeling Indications of Technology in Planetary Transit Light Curves-Dark-side Illumination. The Astrophysical Journal, 809(2). doi:10.1088/0004-637X/ 809/2/139

Rein, H., and Liu, S. (2012). REBOUND: an open-source multi-purpose N- body code for collisional dynamics. Astronomy and Astrophysics, 537. doi: 10.1051/0004-6361/201118085

Rein, H., and Spiegel, D. S. (2014). Ias15: a fast, adaptive, high-order integrator for gravitational dynamics, accurate to machine precision over a billion orbits. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 446(2), 1424-1437. doi:10.1093/mnras/stu2164

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2022-02-25

How to Cite

Bechtel, H. M. (2022). The Effects of Radiation Pressure on Orbiting Mirrors with Non-Zero Eccentricity. Proceedings of the Wisconsin Space Conference, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.17307/wsc.v1i1.339

Issue

Section

Astronomy and Cosmology