• Dr_Satan@lemm.ee
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    9 个月前

    Satellite is surrounded by vacuum. Thus insulated from getting rid of heat that way. So just pump heat into it and watch the temperature rise.

    And you don’t need to melt it. Just cook it till its electronics overheat.

    • penguin_knight@lemmy.world
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      9 个月前

      i’ve never thought about that before.

      isnt that untrue though given that objects freeze instantly in space? Also that would mean you would only need to heat the ISS (rip) once, during its conception.

      • Mikrochip@feddit.de
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        9 个月前

        What mariusafa said is correct, but I wanted to point out that objects in space do not freeze immediately. Dissipation via blackbody radiation is much slower than convection and it can take a long time for something to cool down without the latter. In other words, a vaccuum does function as a very effective insulator, which can sometimes make it more challenging to get rid of heat in space than it is to keep something warm. The ISS, for example, needs to use radiators to keep cool. The same goes for many (most? all?) satellites that are at least as close to the sun as the earth.

      • mariusafa@lemmy.sdf.org
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        9 个月前

        It’s just not true. Disipation by convection effect is one of the ways of disipating energy. Dissipation by blackbody radiation is where most of the energy goes.

        For example infrared heaters transmits most of it’s heat by radiation. Efficient heaters do not use convection mechanisms, well or not only.

    • mariusafa@lemmy.sdf.org
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      9 个月前

      Well all things (human) in space have special paint in order to modify their blackbody radiation and maintain a trade off between disipation heat by EM radiation and keeping a temperature that allows semiconductors to work.

      The point is that satellites do disipate heat. Convection disipation is the worst disipation of heat. The best disipation of energy (heat) is by radiation. Thats why the thermal blankets look shinny weird, just like the satellites. You would need a realiable source of heat in order to overcome the satellite disipation and saturate the satellite.

    • Agent641@lemmy.world
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      9 个月前

      I disagree, you need to melt it, because space is more interesting when its full of lances of molten metal whipping about at orbital speeds

    • Dr_Satan@lemm.ee
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      9 个月前

      But really tiny adjustments, because it’s far away.

      Also there’s a spread in the beam, so that’s nice.

      Also, as I pointed out elsewhere here, there’s a vacuum-bottle effect. You can just pump heat into it. And also you don’t need to melt it, just overheat the electronics.

      • Xoronil@feddit.de
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        9 个月前

        You need to move the point from one horizon to the other. Like the sun, satellites “rise” on one side and set on the other. All of that in less than 15min(in LEO).

        You can watch the dishes turn.

        • pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online
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          9 个月前

          That depends on its orbit. If you’re pumping enough heat into the satellite, you can just aim it at a point in its path. Because space is a good insulator, it wouldn’t lose that much heat each orbit.

    • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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      9 个月前

      If the beam is powerful enough, you’d just aim beforehand and let the satellite slide into it. Not like the fucker can dodge.

      Honestly the control electronics are not why this super doesn’t work.

        • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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          9 个月前

          Could do it by hand, if you’re patient enough. Again: not like the satellite has much say in the matter. It’s gonna be at a specific point, at a specific time. You don’t even need to cover the mirrors, since the sun won’t be at the right angle for all of them to converge until that intended moment.

  • comrade19@lemmy.world
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    9 个月前

    Are those mirrors curved to a focal point? If theyre flat mirrors which they probably would be, i think it could work

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    9 个月前

    Isn’t there some inverse square math rule about radiation like this? The further away you are the radiation reaching you is far less than it would seem? Not good at remembering this math so maybe someone can correct me.

    Even if you could get the mirrors all focused accurately and tracking the object at speed it seems like it wouldn’t be any more of a concern than a really bright searchlight or something.

    • Spaceballstheusername@lemmy.world
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      9 个月前

      The power density square law is for an emitting light source that emits in all directions. Since the incoming light is basically parallel that doesn’t really apply. If you were able to accurately track a satellite (a feat I’m sure is pretty hard) you would definitely vaporize it pretty quickly I’m talking under a minute since space is a good insulator.

      • lurker2718@lemmings.world
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        9 个月前

        It holds if the light spreads wider than the target. So also for directed light sources at large enough distances. Even a perfect mirror must spread the light in the same angle as it is incomming. Hence the beam would at least 3 km wide at the satellite. Therefore the satellite can only recieve a Illumination of ~65W/m^2 which is a few percent of the normal sun brightness of 1300 W/m^2.

        Another way to look at it, the mirrors cant make the sun seem brighter only larger. From the tower you see a large solid angle around you the mirror, therefore, it can seem like you are at the surface of the sun. However, fro. the position of a satellite, the power plant only takes a small solid angle, so it seems like a “smaller” sun. Assuming 400 MW and 1 kW/m^2 (at surface) solar power, it has an area of 400000 m^2, so a solid angle of 4.5e-6 sr from 300km while the sun has 70e-6 sr. So ten times smaller, therefore weaker. Note however here i did not account for attenuation in the atmosphere

        • Spaceballstheusername@lemmy.world
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          9 个月前

          Light doesn’t have to spread wider than a target or else you wouldn’t be able to have telescopes or magnifine glasses. Each panel in unison can act like a giant magnifine glass. The difference in power density would be the ratio of the distance of sun to earth squared vs (sun to earth + earth to satellite) squared which is basically negligible. Where do you get the 3km wide beam? Suns rays are almost parallel.

          • lurker2718@lemmings.world
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            9 个月前

            Yes, you are right, considering the rays emerge from a point. And yes, each panel or all panels in unison can act like a magnifying glass. However, if they focus the light on a point at the height of the satellite, they work like a magnifying glass, or telescope with a focal length of the satellite – power plant distance, so at least 300 km. Considering the angular size of the sun, this telescope would lead to an image of the sun, the size of 3 km.

            No sun rays are not parallel. If you looked at the sun (don’t, it will burn your eyes), would you see it as a point or a disc? As a disc. Why? Because even looking in slightly different directions, you see the sun. So the rays from the sun are not almost parallel, the rays from other stars are, they look point like.

            Two interesting images for you: A solar eclipse viewed trough tree leaves: You can see the partial sun disc by using the small free points in the tree cover as pinhole cameras. Sure, the tree cover does not have lenses, but they only make the image sharper, not smaller. In this image the focal length is only the height of the trees and the image is already a few cm across. It also shows that the rays from the sun are not parallel. If they were, all rays going through the small free spots in the tree cover would end up at the same spot on the ground.

            International Space Station, ISS, flying in front of the Sun: As the sun and the satellite are far away, we can assume that the angular size of the original sun and the virtual sun image are approximately the same when viewed from the power plant. Hence, this image shows how the mirrors would form an image of the sun, where only a small part of it hits the sun.
            As the sun is much larger than the ISS, the angle of rays which come from the sun is much larger than the angle of rays which hit the ISS.

            • Spaceballstheusername@lemmy.world
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              9 个月前

              Unfortunately I can’t open the links on my phone so it’s hard to follow what you’re describing. I understand the rays aren’t perfectly parallel but they’re pretty close to parallel. Do you mind doing the math of where you are getting 3km from I’m not really following your logic. It doesn’t make sense to me that the light should suddenly spread out way more after bouncing off a mirror than if it has just continued traveling straight.

              • lurker2718@lemmings.world
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                9 个月前

                The links are actually only random images from an image search with the terms “solar eclipse through tree leaves” and “iss in front of sun”.

                I think you have in mind, that the rays are not parallel because they have to arrive at different positions. As you say, this is negligible, and it can even be avoided by the tilting of the mirrors. However, the rays start from different parts of the sun, and as the sun is huge, this angle is not so small.

                I’ll try to explain it in more detail, sorry for the wall of text, it got longer than expected. In this case, we can use simplified ray optics and ignore the wave nature of light. This means, the light of the different mirrors or even pieces of mirrors just adds to one another. An important point, even if obvious, is that each point on the mirror surface can only have one orientation. Now we “select” the orientation of this point, we orient it in a way, that it reflects the rays from the center of the sun1 directly on the sun.2 But until now, we have ignored the rays which come from the rim of the sun. These rays start at a different position, namely the sun radius (695700 km). Due to different starting position, the rays have a different angle to arrive at the power plant, arcsin(sun radius / sun-earth-distance), which is 0.27°. Now we already oriented the mirrors parts in a way, that the rays from the center of the sun are reflected onto the satellite, but the rays from the rim of the sun come at an 0.27° differing angle. If the incidence of the ray on a mirror is changed by an angle, the outbound ray is also changed by the same angle. This leads reflected rays leaving in a direction 0.27° offset from the direction to the satellite. Assuming the satellite is at a height of 300 km and directly above, it is 300 km away, the smallest realistic distance. With this angle, it leads to a miss of plant-satellite-distance * sin(angle) leading to 1.4 km. This thought is valid for all points on the rim. Similarly, the rays between the rim and the center land between the satellite and 1.4 km off target. Hence the plant projects an image of the sun onto the satellite with a radius of 1.4 km.

                1 Well they actually do not come directly from the sun, they still come from very close to the surface, but they seem to come from the center of the sun and for rays it is not important how far they have already traveled. We can just assume the sun is a disc.
                2 If we assume the mirror is optimally shaped, we can reflect every ray, which seems to come from the center of the sun, perfectly on the satellite. Such a mirror would be part of an ellipsoid, with focal points at the center of the sun and the center of the satellite. In practice, it would be practically indistinguishable from a paraboloid with the satellite (deviance of 1.5 µm with a guessed plant size of 1 km). This is possible as the rays through the center of the sun falling onto the plant are, as you say, almost parallel.

        • Spaceballstheusername@lemmy.world
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          9 个月前

          No that’s not true only about 30% of light energy scatters when traveling through the atmosphere to earth and certain wavelengths are almost completely absorbed in the way down. So on the way back up it should be a high portion make it to the satellite I would imagine 80%. Even worse case scenario 200 megawats shinning on a satellite would vaporize it almost instantly.

        • JungleJim@sh.itjust.works
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          9 个月前

          But the photons made it through the atmosphere in the first place to be collected by the reflectors. Is there just not enough energy left to make it back out before cooling off?

          • pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online
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            9 个月前

            That’s the assumption, yes. But if the beams are coherent (like a laser) atmospheric interference would be a lot smaller.

            The real question is whether the light would be coherent, which I lean towards no on.

            • nicoweio@lemmy.world
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              9 个月前

              It’s not even coherent when the sun emits it. For one, it consists of a large range of wavelengths… And I doubt there’s a way to make light coherent at that order of magnitude.

      • Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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        9 个月前

        There is still a power density square law, but with focused energy you are only integrating power flux across a portion of the sphere’s surface instead of the whole thing.

        • Spaceballstheusername@lemmy.world
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          9 个月前

          It depends how the actual system was set up if they used flat reflectors then yeah it applies but the difference in power would be the ratio of the distance from earth to the sun vs the distance of E to S +mirror to satellite which would be negligible. If you had a parabolic mirror you could get no loss in power. The power density square law only apply because the area the light is being distributed over is growing at a square ratio to radius but if the beams are parallel the area doesn’t grow.

    • Redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 个月前

      There is a cool easy-to-show fact that you can never make something hotter than the light source my focusing its light.
      Since otherwise you could take heat and divide it into a hotter and colder region, decreasing entropy without using energy.

        • Redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          9 个月前

          The easy to show part was the second sentence of my comment.

          This is really useful physics trivia, because the basic truth is easy to show from a simple law, but the detailed explanations go quite in-depth.

          With lenses, you trade bewteen angular accuracy and light density.

          For a challenge, try it with LEDs. Where do you find the source “temperature”, you can get from focusing an LEDs light?

          • nicoweio@lemmy.world
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            8 个月前

            That’s an intriguing question. My first guess would be it corresponds to the diode’s band gap?

  • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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    9 个月前

    My brain has been poisoned too thoroughly by New Vegas for me to make any vaguely reasonable comment. W should make Archimedes and melt putin into a puddle.

  • FiskFisk33@startrek.website
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    9 个月前

    I suspect in order to stay focused on such distances you’d need extremely flat mirrors. Like, telescope grade stuff.

    I doubt the mirrors they have is even within an order of magnitude flat enough.

    • Liz@midwest.social
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      9 个月前

      You might even need adaptive mirrors to deal with atmospheric distortion. Also, they would have to move relatively quickly and very precisely (read: an impossible combination) to track satellites in low orbit. Plus, you could only hit satellites that crossed overhead at a relatively high angle.

      But yeah, one solar tower plant did a stunt where they reflected an image made of sunlight at the ISS and an astronaut took a picture. They didn’t melt.

      • einfach_orangensaft@feddit.deOP
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        9 个月前

        where they reflected an image made of sunlight at the ISS and an astronaut took a picture

        got a link to said picture? it may make for a good meme template. I saw that the chinese did that kind of ‘pixel art’ with there own near identical solar thermal plant

      • magikmw@lemm.ee
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        9 个月前

        I’m no optical physicist, but based on empirical evidence of not melting due to light arriving from a huge ball of thermonuclear fire 8 light minutes away (and sure it’s not exactly focused), I propose a hypotesis that light-based energy transfer in atmosphere is very lossy and not feasible as a weapon.

        Which is perfect for this community, of course.

        • pearsaltchocolatebar@discuss.online
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          9 个月前

          So, the light from the sun is very spread out. This is why it doesn’t hurt you. When you take almost all of the light from a large area and focus it to a point, it starts to add up fast.

          You can test this with a leaf and a magnifying glass. The mirrors in this scenario are acting as a giant lens.

          The biggest question is whether the mirror array is large enough to redirect enough energy to make it though the atmosphere.

          It would likely be probable if the facility was specifically designed to do this.

        • FiskFisk33@startrek.website
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          9 个月前

          You’re not correct. you get pretty much the same amount of energy at the surface as you’d do if you placed yourself just above the atmosphere. The reason we get the low amount we do is the inverse square law. and an array of mirrors gets around that law by controlled focusing. Of course there are many other reasons it wouldn’t work, but this ain’t it.

          • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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            9 个月前

            Why do people claim the inverse square law applies? The light has already travelled 147 million km, another 500km from the earth back to the satellite is mathematically insignificant, it’s a rounding error.

            • lurker2718@lemmings.world
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              9 个月前

              It holds if the light spreads wider than the target. So also for directed light sources at large enough distances. Even a perfect mirror must spread the light in the same angle as it is incoming. Hence the beam would at least 3 km wide at the satellite. Therefore the satellite can only recieve a Illumination of ~65W/m^2 which is a few percent of the normal sun brightness of 1300 W/m^2 in space.

              Another way to look at it, the mirrors cant make the sun seem brighter only larger. From the tower you see a large solid angle around you the mirror, therefore, it can seem like you are at the surface of the sun. However, fro. the position of a satellite, the power plant only takes a small solid angle, so it seems like a “smaller” sun. Assuming 400 MW and 1 kW/m^2 (at surface) solar power, it has an area of 400000 m^2, so a solid angle of 4.5e-6 sr from 300km while the sun has 70e-6 sr. So ten times smaller, therefore weaker. Note however here i did not account for attenuation in the atmosphere

              • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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                9 个月前

                Sure that’s one mirror. But we are talking. Thousands and thousands upon thousands of them.

                10,000x65= 65,000 which is now ~60x the Sun passing by it.

                And why are you saying it would be 3km wide? I’d like to see the math please.

                • lurker2718@lemmings.world
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                  9 个月前

                  No i am talking about all the mirrors as one surface, no matter they are really one or consist of small pieces

                  For the 65 W/m^2 i already used the size of the whole system, so all 10000 mirrors.

                  The sun has a angular diameter of 32 arcmin. (see here) Hence, the rays hitting one point of the one mirror, have come from different angles, namly filling a circle with this angular diameter. By reflection, the directions of the rays changes. But rays hitting the same spot on the mirror which were misaligned before by 32 arcmin are also misaglined by 32 arcmin after the mirror, independent of its shape. Therefore, the rays emerging from the power plant diverege by at least 32 arcmin. This is not a problem for operation, as this leads to a size of 4.6 m at an estimated maximum distance of 500 m between tower and mirrors. When the mirrors point at a satellite however, a distance of 300 km leads to a beam diameter of 2.8 km calculation

                  Even an ideal mirror can only project a point source onto a point. It is impossible to focus the rays of an extended source onto one point. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etendue if you want to know details. With conservation of etendue you can also calculate this in a similar way.

  • Mustard@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    9 个月前

    Yeah except the focal point of those mirrors is measured in meters not 100s of kilometers. You can’t use them to focus on something that far away.

  • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    9 个月前

    Those are designed to focus on a large, stationary, object not far away, not a small hypersonic object very very far away.

  • PutangInaMo@sh.itjust.works
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    9 个月前

    If you’re going to make a meme about satellites and math, the least you could do is spell correctly…

    Axis. Unless there is a satellite out there adjusting itself in barbarian equations.

  • doctorcrimson@lemmy.today
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    9 个月前

    I don’t think they’re all accurate enough to all hit a focal point dead-on even if you built a targeting computer to handle atmospheric lensing.

    Also, the economic cost of it probably makes missiles seem really cheap.