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Celephais
03-28-2008, 09:48 AM
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23827045/

Paper airplane to fly from space to Earth

Scientists say a successful flight could advance spacecraft design


By Mari Yamaguchi
updated 10:40 a.m. ET, Thurs., March. 27, 2008

KASHIWA, Japan - Japanese scientists and origami masters hope to launch a paper airplane from space and learn from its trip back to Earth.
It's no joke. A prototype passed a durability test in a wind tunnel this month, Japan's space agency adopted it Wednesday for feasibility studies, and a well-known astronaut is interested in participating.

http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/ap/7d082ff8-7ba1-4e40-a580-7cbc1084b8a6.widec.jpg (http://forum.gsplayers.com/)
Itsuo Inouye / AP
A 2.8 inch long and 2 inch wide space shuttle-shaped paper plane survived a hypersonic wind tunnel with conditions it would face re-entering Earth's atmosphere.

A successful flight from space by an origami plane could have far-reaching implications for the design of re-entry vehicles or space probes for upper atmospheric exploration, said project leader Shinji Suzuki, a professor at Tokyo University's Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

Suzuki said he was skeptical a decade ago when he first discussed with experts the idea of sending into space a craft made in the tradition of Japan's ancient art of paper folding.

"It sounded like a simply impossible, crazy idea," Suzuki said. "I gave it some more thought, and came to think it may not be ridiculous after all, and could very well survive if it comes down extremely slowly."

In a test outside Tokyo in early February, a prototype about 2.8 inches long and 2 inches wide survived Mach 7 speeds and broiling temperatures up to 446 degrees Fahrenheit in a hypersonic wind tunnel — conditions meant to approximate what the plane would face entering Earth's atmosphere.

Having survived the 12-second test with no major damage or burns, the tiny plane theoretically could get back to Earth because re-entry from outer space involves passing through several layers that last only a few seconds each, said Osamu Imamura, a scientist who works with Suzuki.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, accepted it Wednesday for three years of feasibility studies and promised up to $300,000 in funding per year.

At this point, the proposal faces just one challenge, but it's a potentially crippling one: There is no way to track the paper craft or predict when or where they may land.

Critics say that makes the test pointless. Yasuyuki Miyazaki, an aerospace engineer at Nihon University who is not involved in the project, said the paper shuttles might not come back at all, depending on the angle at which they enter the atmosphere.

Don't knock it, until you try it!

Suzuki said many things about science "have to be learned simply by trying them out."

Takuo Toda, the head of the Japan Origami Airplane Association, had nursed the idea of flying a shuttle-shaped paper plane since NASA in 1977 launched its first space shuttle Enterprise, a craft without an engine or heat shield that was used to perform test flights in the atmosphere.
He spent 18 months figuring out how to fold a perfect origami spacecraft from a plain sheet of paper — without cutting, stitching or taping it — and tested hundreds of designs in the process.

Then I thought, perhaps I could someday have it fly back to earth from space," Toda said. "Nobody took it seriously, saying it would burn instantly."

Toda and Suzuki first met about 10 years ago, when Suzuki and other scientists attended Toda's launching of a 6.6-foot-long giant paper craft from the top of a mountain. The successful flight impressed Suzuki, and Toda revealed his long-cherished dream.

The effort has been a labor of love. It's had no outside funding so far, relying on paper donated by the origami association and Suzuki's access to Tokyo University equipment.

The project has inspired curiosity in the scientific community in Japan.
"You may think it's impossible, but we scientists are all extremely interested. I think it's a great experiment," said Miyazaki, the Nihon University engineer.

"No matter how it turns out, a paper craft flight from space would tell us many things," Miyazaki said. "The fact that a paper shuttle has endured the harsh environment in the lab tests also provides valuable data for future aerospace technology."

Paper made of sugar cane

Suzuki and Toda use origami paper made of sugar cane fibers that are resistant to heat, wind and water. They spray a special coating onto the paper and then fold it into shuttles about 8 inches long and 4 inches wide that weigh about 1.05 ounces. How many shuttles will be released has not been decided.

The pair theorize that with the coating, rounded edges, a rounded nose cone and almost no weight, their craft will face very little of the heat-generating friction that causes most damage to vehicles re-entering Earth's atmosphere.

Astronaut Koichi Wakata, who has expressed personal interest in the project, would throw several origami shuttles into the wake of the international space station, which travels at Mach 20 some 250 miles above Earth — if the JAXA feasibility studies pan out, Suzuki said.
Findings from the paper shuttles' flight could be used in developing new lightweight space probes that would study the upper atmosphere, Miyazaki said. The results also could help in designing a full-scale shuttle that re-enters the atmosphere slowly to reduce fiction and heat, said Suzuki.

Suzuki and Toda plan to write a message of peace on the planes in several languages, along with a request for anyone spotting them to notify the team.

"Just imagine, children around the world would be anxiously waiting for the return of our origami shuttle, perhaps looking up into the sky from time to time," Suzuki said. "That would be great fun."

Asha
03-28-2008, 11:41 AM
Unless I just haven't read it right and missed something, how can they keep saying there's so much they will learn when it's said there's no way to track the shuttle and it's flight / landing?
It would be a nice irony if it did work well though.
It's also be funny if its velocity, once in our atmosphere was enough to stick into one of the excited kids heads.

Gan
03-28-2008, 11:54 AM
Looks cool if they can pull it off.

Stanley Burrell
03-28-2008, 12:32 PM
Woah.

That sort of trumps the little paper airplanes I threw from the 98th floor observation deck of The Empire State Building. Or the handful of coins I threw down the elevator shaft of The Empire State Building on the 70th floor.

Or the baby I hurled earthbound from the lunar surface. Of Europa. The Japanese are always one-upping my accomplishments.

Blud
03-31-2008, 11:31 AM
I don't know about this...I'm a little skeptical too.

The only real way to make this spacecraft even worth all of this effort is to make it a spacecraft, complete with instrumentation, the ability to direct its flight path, carry cargo, etc. All of this adds mass (electronics, mechanical, hydrolics, etc), which will increases its return speed to earth due to gravity, which increases it's friction with the earth's atmosphere, which seems to make paper a poor choice of materials. I just don't see this working out.

Who knows though...Would be cool if it did, but I don't see it happening in my lifetime.

Blud
03-31-2008, 11:35 AM
By the way, as an engineer I love stories like this. Keep 'em coming.

Gan
03-31-2008, 11:51 AM
I was under the impression that the less decent speed the less friction was produced (ie. less heat).

Dealing with air friction would be great if we also didnt have to deal with gravity too.

Stanley Burrell
03-31-2008, 12:09 PM
I was under the impression that the less decent speed the less friction was produced (ie. less heat).

Dealing with air friction would be great if we also didnt have to deal with gravity too.

They had to work with a smaller aircraft because of all those deadly space fragments of satellite the Chinese Nazi-terrorists left behind, obviously.

There is no font for sarcasm, seriousness or ... soup. Fack, I really wanted to wax poetic with alliteration :(

Gan
03-31-2008, 12:39 PM
Use italics...

If you're lucky, the receptors in your brain recognize the italic font and you automatically break out in prose.

Stanley Burrell
03-31-2008, 12:46 PM
Use italics...

If you're lucky, the receptors in your brain recognize the italic font and you automatically break out in prose.

"...Already, I can see the...chemical precursors that signal the onset of an emotion, designed specifically to overwhelm logic and reason."

Fuck that.

Gan
03-31-2008, 12:48 PM
"...Already, I can see the...chemical precursors that signal the onset of an emotion, whilest discussing the ambivilities of gravity and motion."

Fixed that for you.


Looks like you need pharmacological assistance to break through your iambic block.

Celephais
03-31-2008, 12:48 PM
"...Already, I can see the...chemical precursors that signal the onset of an emotion, designed specifically to overwhelm logic and reason."

Fuck that.
Hahaha, awesome response, Stan.

I don't like using italics, if someone can't figure out when I'm being sarcastic and it goes over their heads, all the better. I love laughing at chumps who can't figure out sarcasm.

Celephais
03-31-2008, 12:49 PM
Fixed that for you.


Looks like you need pharmacological assistance to break through your iambic block.
Hehe, see!

WOOOOSH

Stanley Burrell
03-31-2008, 12:50 PM
Fixed that for you.


Looks like you need pharmacological assistance to break through your iambic block.

I'm pretty sure with some of our posters' propensity for posting on the PC, that we've already transcended addiction of Earthly things.

It's a post about paper airplanes and outer space. And I used italics to quote The Architect, c'mon.

Gan
03-31-2008, 12:51 PM
Hehe, see!

WOOOOSH

:(

I'll go sit back down now.

Stanley Burrell
03-31-2008, 12:52 PM
I'll go sit back down now.

There is no chair.

Lord Nelek
03-31-2008, 03:17 PM
I'd like to see a picture of this paper plane.

Sounds neat though.

Gan
03-31-2008, 04:16 PM
There is no chair.

There is only the concept of "chairness".

;)

radamanthys
03-31-2008, 04:54 PM
I'd like to see a picture of this paper plane.

It's at the top of the OP/article.