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==== Annotated web version of paper presented to the ==== == Current Challenges for Wireless Power Transfer Workshop == ==== Washington DC, 2014 September 02 ==== ------ === Note to reviewers === |
=== WPT === ----- [[attachment:ssps2014.pdf | Draft version here ]] ----- This paper was submitted to the Wireless Power Transfer workshop as a fast growth path to space solar power satellites. It was accepted, and then later rejected, for [[http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/m/mahatmagan103630.html|reasons]] I will not go into. |
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There is room in the paper submitted to EDAS on May 30th for another paragraph or four more references, more if you can help me trim what I've already written. There is far more information on this website, which is continually updated and expanded. When the final paper is reviewed and accepted, I will put a version it here, correcting errors and adding links to supplementary material, changing continuously. This is a new idea and very much a work in progress. Completing the work and deploying the results may take years, but less with your generous suggestions. Thank you for your time. [[attachment:ssps2014.pdf | Draft version here ]] |
Writing this paper has been a good opportunity to re-examine youthful assumptions. When space solar power was first proposed, there were a handful of >2.4 GHz services, and the main concern was health effects from microwaves. Now we have billions of microwave systems, from wireless access points and bluetooth devices to satellite dishes and transceivers with unfiltered front-end low noise amplifiers. Aircraft are guided by radar, battle groups are coordinated by radar, and microwaves connect to deep space probes and planetary landers. This is not a good environment to pollute with gigawatt power beams, harmonics, and sidelobes. If we want to beam power from space to earth, we must think of methods that won't intefere with existing trillion-dollar infrastructure. |
Server Sky - Space Energy Transformed
WPT
This paper was submitted to the Wireless Power Transfer workshop as a fast growth path to space solar power satellites. It was accepted, and then later rejected, for reasons I will not go into.
Writing this paper has been a good opportunity to re-examine youthful assumptions. When space solar power was first proposed, there were a handful of >2.4 GHz services, and the main concern was health effects from microwaves. Now we have billions of microwave systems, from wireless access points and bluetooth devices to satellite dishes and transceivers with unfiltered front-end low noise amplifiers. Aircraft are guided by radar, battle groups are coordinated by radar, and microwaves connect to deep space probes and planetary landers. This is not a good environment to pollute with gigawatt power beams, harmonics, and sidelobes. If we want to beam power from space to earth, we must think of methods that won't intefere with existing trillion-dollar infrastructure.