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by Filligree
1482 days ago
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> You can't beat hydrogen as a fuel. As the lightest molecule, you get the highest exhaust velocity for the least energy input. This is probably right, but the way you said it made me wonder. Would it be possible to strip electrons from atoms, then use just the electrons as propellant? Or would the ensuing static charge of the spaceship render this infeasible? I imagine it'd pull in electrons from all around itself, but I don't know how the numbers come out. |
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Back-of-the-envelope math says a large spaceship will reach 100 kV potential at a charge imbalance of around 1e15 electrons (total mass: 1e-15 kg). So yeah, completely unfeasible.
(It's asking the wrong question though. Electric thrusters aren't thermal systems, and aren't limited by molecular weight as severely as thermal engines are. You can get stupidly high Isp (>200 km/s) out of heavy ions, just by raising the voltage).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_thruster#Comparisons