Studies over the last decade have shown radioisotope-based nuclear electric propulsion to be enhancing and, in some cases, enabling for many potential robotic science missions. Also known as radioisotope electric propulsion (REP), the technology offers the performance advantages of traditional reactor-powered electric propulsion (i.e., high specific impulse propulsion at large distances from the Sun), but with much smaller, affordable spacecraft. Future use of REP requires development of radioisotope power sources with system specific powers well above that of current systems. The US Department of Energy and NASA have developed an advanced Stirling radioisotope generator (ASRG) engineering unit, which was subjected to rigorous flight qualification-level tests in 2008, and began extended lifetime testing later that year. This advancement, along with recent work on small ion thrusters and life extension technology for Hall thrusters, could enable missions using REP sometime during the next decade.


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    Title :

    Radioisotope Electric Propulsion (REP): A Near-Term Approach to Nuclear Propulsion


    Contributors:
    G. R. Schmidt (author) / D. H. Manzella (author) / H. Kamhawi (author) / T. Kremic (author) / S. R. Oleson (author)

    Publication date :

    2009


    Size :

    7 pages


    Type of media :

    Report


    Type of material :

    No indication


    Language :

    English





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    Schmidt, George R. / Manzella, David H. / Kamhawi, Hani et al. | Elsevier | 2009


    Radioisotope Electric Propulsion (REP): A Near-Term Approach to Nuclear Propulsion

    Schmidt, George R. / Manzella, David H. / Kamhawi, Hani et al. | NTRS | 2009


    Radioisotope Electric Propulsion (REP): A Near-Term Nuclear Propulsion System

    Schmidt, George / Manzella, David / Kamhawi, Hani et al. | AIAA | 2008


    Radioisotope propulsion

    ROMERO, J. B. | AIAA | 1964