[AR] Re: Catching Oumuamua

  • From: Henry Spencer <hspencer@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: Arocket List <arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 1 Mar 2021 23:54:11 -0500 (EST)

On Tue, 2 Mar 2021, Michael Kelly wrote:

And, yes, Americium 241 is back in production (big time).  It would provide a more level power output in RTG applications, given a half-life ~> 5 times that of Pu 238. 

Only if you use one of the "advanced" conversion technologies, rather than the thermoelectric elements used in all flown RTGs to date. The output loss of thermoelectric RTGs is dominated by buildup of radiation damage in the semiconductor thermoelectric elements, *not* by Pu-238 decay. (The decay is not insignificant but it's a lesser issue.)

Am-241 produces a lot more gammas and neutrons than Pu-238, which would probably make it worse, not better, for that. They're also an issue for spacecraft electronics -- it's not an accident that even Pu-238 RTGs tend to be located away from electronics, in fact preferably out on booms -- and for pre-launch handling.

Am-241's much longer half-life is actually a *disadvantage* for missions lasting only a decade or three, because it means much lower heat output per kilogram.

The European interest in Am-241 is not because it's superior, but because they have no Pu-238 production capability and decided it was hard to get set up for it. (I'm not sure exactly why.)

Henry

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