NASA Battery Power for Space Vehicles

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NASA believes that its solid-state battery under development is exceeding its goals. Its innovative battery pack is lighter, safer, and performs better than current batteries do, it says. This development holds promise for evolving electric aircraft. However, the national aeronautics and space administration program dates back to early human space flights, when NASA battery power was super critical.

Battery Power for NASA Project Mercury

The national aeronautics and space administration’s human flight space program began with Project Mercury in 1959. The plan was to put a person in space, and return them safely back to earth. NASA battery power was supercritical in those days, because they used primary, non-rechargeable silver-zinc batteries.

nasa battery power
NASA Technicians Work on Mercury Spacecraft in 1960 (NASA BY Public Domain)

Silver-zinc (Ag-Zn) battery cells were the best technology available to the Mercury team. In fact, they had the highest density ever, until John Goodenough’s lithium-ion batteries arrived. Russia used Ag-Zn batteries for its Sputnik satellites, as did United States for its saturn launch vehicle, apollo lunar module, lunar rover, and life-support backpack, according to Wikipedia.

How Much Battery Energy Did NASA Need?

NASA’s Mercury capsule used three, 3-kilowatt-hour primary silver-zinc batteries for its main energy source. Plus it had another two on standby, together with a 1.5-kilowatt-hour squib battery to fire a detonator. These NASA battery power sources required careful calculation, in order to optimize weight and size.

Calculating spacecraft battery power takes several factors into account, according to website City Life. Accuracy would have been supercritical in the case of the Gemini spacecraft, where every cubic inch counted. There were no solar panel backups, because the silver-zinc batteries were single use, and could not recharge.

The following factors affected power requirements that NASA engineers must have agonized over:

  • Satellite size increased the number of systems and instruments requiring power.
  • Payload and instrumentation had to be as simple as possible to limit energy requirements.
  • Mission duration added a time dimension, linearly increasing power requirements.

If the Gemini module had run out of power, which it thankfully did not, then it would have simply ceased to function. There was no satellite-recovery equipment in the 1960’s. We salute the bravery of those early astronauts, willing to give everything they had to advance the frontiers of space exploration.

More Information

Nuclear Batteries for Space Exploration

Sulfur Selenium Battery Breakthrough at NASA

Preview Image: Evolution of NASA Spacecraft

Project Mercury – A Wikipedia Evaluation

Wikipedia Introduction to Silver-Zinc Batteries

Battery Applications for Early NASA Missions

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I tripped over a shrinking bank balance and fell into the writing gig unintentionally. This was after I escaped the corporate world and searched in vain for ways to become rich on the internet by doing nothing. Despite the fact that writing is no recipe for wealth, I rather enjoy it. I will not deny I am obsessed with it when I have the time. I live in Margate on the Kwazulu-Natal south coast of South Africa. I work from home where I ponder on the future of the planet, and what lies beyond in the great hereafter. Sometimes I step out of my computer into the silent riverine forests, and empty golden beaches for which the area is renowned. Richard

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