A Tether-Assisted Space Launch System for Super-Earths

Abstract

Super-Earths are one of the most common types of extrasolar planets currently known. Hundreds of these planets have been discovered by the Kepler spacecraft and other surveys, with masses up to 10 M and consequently higher surface gravity than Earth. These planets would have greater escape velocities than Earth, reaching as high as 27 km s-1 for the largest super-Earths. To launch a spacecraft from the surface of such a world with chemical rockets would be cost-prohibitive or nearly so, while another commonly proposed launch system, the space elevator, would lack the necessary tensile strength to support its weight. However, we find that a hybrid launch system combining chemical rockets and a space-based momentum-exchange tether could reduce the v to be provided by chemical rockets to reach escape velocity by 40\%, bringing it back into the realm of feasibility. Such a system could also function on Earth with considerably less exotic materials.

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