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Spot NASA's Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) which is now visible in the night sky.

  • Kate Green
  • Sep 7, 2024
  • 3 min read

By Brett Tingley

September 06, 2024


NASA's Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) can be seen with the naked eye as it orbits Earth, and can be tracked with a helpful app.


An experimental NASA solar sail can be seen in the night sky as it orbits the Earth.

NASA's Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) launched in April 2024 atop a Rocket Lab Electron rocket. The mission is designed to test solar sail technology to help NASA develop larger spacecraft in the future using this next-generation propulsion system. Solar sails work similarly to nautical sails, but instead of being pushed by wind, they are impacted by the pressure of sunlight as photons bounce off the reflective material they are made from.


On August 29, the ACS3 spacecraft deployed its 80-square-metre solar sail while operating at an altitude about 1,000 kilometres above Earth, which is nearly twice as high as the International Space Station. As the ACS3 spacecraft orbits Earth, its large surface area means it reflects enough sunlight to be seen from the ground. Under some conditions, the solar sail demonstrator could even appear as bright as Sirius, the brightest star in the night sky. If you want to see it for yourself, you are in luck: NASA has an app that lets you track sighting opportunities from your location.

 

 

To most easily see NASA's ACS3 solar sail, you will want to download the official NASA app from the Google Play Store or Apple App Store.


From there, navigate to the "Featured" tab at the bottom of the app. You should see a section for the Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) under "Featured missions."


Once you tap on that mission, you will be able to then tap on "Sightings." If you've allowed the app to access your location, the app will give you a list of times and dates for when you'll be able to see NASA's solar sail, including in what direction of the sky it will be visible, its celestial altitude and the duration of each sighting.


Satellite tracker Kevin Fetter caught ACS3 on camera on September 05 as it passed near one of the brightest stars in the night sky. "It got bright for a short time as it was passing by the star. Briefly it was just as bright as Vega, the 5th brightest star in the night sky," Fetter stated to Space.com.

 

 

Some researchers believe solar sails could advance space travel in the future by allowing the development of spacecraft that are lightweight yet can still travel great distances without the need for carrying heavy fuels.


Solar sails can theoretically also reach high speeds, as it is believed their unique method of propulsion can grant them infinite acceleration.


Solar sails could lower the cost of deep space exploration while also enabling missions of long durations, since their fuel supplies never exhaust. If ACS3 can successfully manoeuvre in orbit and succeed in its mission, it could potentially help develop more advanced solar sail spacecraft.


"The hope is that the new technologies verified on this spacecraft will inspire others to use them in ways we haven't even considered," said Alan Rhodes, the ACS3 mission's lead systems engineer at NASA's Ames Research Centre, in an agency statement.


Scientists have already proposed using solar sails to send missions to Saturn's moon Enceladus or Jupiter's moon Europa, while the Breakthrough Starshot initiative has for years suggested that solar sails propelled by lasers could reach Alpha Centauri, the closest star system to our own, to search for life.


Image #1: This artist’s concept shows the Advanced Composite Solar Sail System spacecraft sailing in space using the energy of the sun. (Image credit: NASA/Aero Animation/Ben Schweighart)


 

Image #2: Screenshots of the NASA app and the features of its Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) section. (Image credit: Future/Brett Tingley)



Image #3: A photo taken from aboard NASA's Advanced Composite Solar Sail System (ACS3) spacecraft. (Image credit: NASA)



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