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<p><BR/>Replying to:<BR/><DIV CLASS='Discussion_PostQuote'>What problem are you trying to solve ?Unless you have some process in mind that is much more efficient than the solar cells normally used for power of earth satellites, then you are not only going to incur the cost associated with having basically the same area of solar cells required for the individual satellites but also the losses of transmission, plus the weight of the transmitting and receiving antennae. The large receiving antennae being discussed will be a challenge in themselves. Large membrane structures in a vacuum can get into unstable "flapping" modes so you have to take care of that aspect of the design as well.The tranmitting antennas are going to be fairly complicated as well, since I presume that you would be serving many satellites simultaneously. What do you have in mind, some sort of steerable phased array arrangement ?This sounds like a very compllicated solution in search of a problem. <br /> Posted by DrRocket</DIV><br /></p><p>Some SPS discussion has focused on using integrated-circuit tunable microwave arrays. These would be large flat antennae able to track multiple target receivers moving simultaneously. Depending on specifics this type of circuit transmitter could be integrated into the same strucuture as the power generator. Ideal system produces multiple phased microwave beams, preferably in multiple power levels. Whatever technology, location has strong influence on design. Choosing an Earth-Sun Lagrange point for instance would enable a power station that is optimized to have one face Sun-pointing and the other facing cis-Lunar space. That would be a much, much larger structure than the original post. </p><p>A 10MW SPS could be made now using either PV or Sterling engines (solar dynamic) and inflatable L'Garde style antennae. Probably best to focus on several high-power applications such as space station support. Focus on a common set of needs (baseline power) and optimize for that. Maybe an L-point or some kind of polar orbit? If the customer satellite can store power for a time it makes SPS positioning much easier - GEO or L1, serviced by one of it's customer stations.</p><p>Josh </p><p> </p><p> </p> <div class="Discussion_UserSignature"> <div align="center"><em>We need a first generation of pioneers.</em><br /></div> </div>