Satellites encased in wood are in the works
Posted by andsoitis 4 days ago
Comments
Comment by alnwlsn 23 hours ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanhui_Shi_Weixing
>The successful recovery of an FSW-0 recoverable satellite in 1974 established China as the third nation to launch and recover a satellite
>A novel feature of the spacecraft's re-entry module was the use of impregnated oak, a natural material, as the ablative material for its heat shield.
Edit: There's more! As usual, Scott Manley has it covered https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gtxYP9fLMmk
Comment by tucnak 17 hours ago
Comment by Tepix 17 hours ago
Comment by xerox13ster 16 hours ago
That’s what I took from GP saying “I can recommend BPS Space video about ablation” followed by their opinion of the video.
I’m curious, what did you take from them saying “video about ablation” that made you think the video was about ‘wood in satellites’? How does one get from A to B here?
I want to be perfectly clear that I understand the thread we’re in right now is about wood and satellites. I want to TRY to understand how you read their comment so I can understand the confusion.
Comment by Tepix 12 hours ago
Comment by testaccount28 16 hours ago
A: i'm really interested in things that are red. here's one: firetrucks.
B: here's a neat thing which is green: unripe tomatoes.
A: um, that's not red.
C (you): wow why would you possibly think that the thing was red? they explicitly stated it was green. not sure what comment you read.
do you understand how out of place B's comment was to begin with?Comment by Jarwain 11 hours ago
Comment by xerox13ster 15 hours ago
The whole thread is about space. The comment they replied to both shared a YouTube video and discussed ablations, so they brought a contribution to the thread: Here’s this interesting video from a space YouTuber in case anybody is curious about ablative materials in rocketry.
What did you bring to the conversation by remarking that the video that they shared was not about wood in satellites? They’d already said so; it was a Captain Obvious level response.
I have at least brought curiosity as to why you felt that was a meaningful contribution and how you could have arrived at such a dismissive statement from a place of curiosity.
I take it that despite being in a thread about wood being used as an ablative material for satellites, you have no curiosity about ablative materials in the devices that transport said satellites?
Did you think that they misunderstood what thread they were in? Their comment was relevant and welcome. Frankly, yours was against HN guidelines, and I was trying to politely draw attention to that fact by getting you to analyze your conclusion.
Comment by gnabgib 1 day ago
Related (same company) on this recycled post from econo:
Wooden satellite heads to space in Mars exploration test (105 points, 2024, 71 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42051687
Japan to launch first wooden satellite to combat space pollution (55 points, 2024, 17 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39414641
Related - different company:
Woodsat: A Space Agency Will Launch a Tiny, Wooden Satellite (105 points, 2021, 18 comments)https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27549097
Comment by fouc 23 hours ago
* cheaper material
* naturally dampens vibrations -> can potentially help sensitive instruments
* naturally insulates heat better -> saves power on heating
* doesn't block radio frequencies -> lower drag in low orbits -> 50% longer orbital time
* fully burns up on re-entryComment by varjag 15 hours ago
Common aluminium and titanium alloys are dirt cheap. Doubly so in aerospace context.
Comment by direwolf20 13 hours ago
You're right though. I really doubt the cost of the aluminium is relevant to any satellite. It costs over 10k to launch the smallest cubesat.
Comment by varjag 11 hours ago
Comment by CableNinja 20 hours ago
Comment by lnenad 17 hours ago
My first assumption when thinking about wood is the one that you are having. But my second assumption would be that they've probably thought about the same things.
Comment by creatonez 5 hours ago
Comment by lnenad 5 hours ago
Comment by pjerem 17 hours ago
Conditions in space are extreme but at least they are stable and known so i'd bet we would know how to treat the wood for this environment.
Comment by pjc50 16 hours ago
Comment by dtgriscom 10 hours ago
Comment by peyton 20 hours ago
Comment by nxobject 19 hours ago
(https://amorimcorksolutions.com/en-us/our-brands/amorim-tps/)
Comment by fuddle 23 hours ago
Comment by vjvjvjvjghv 22 hours ago
Comment by schaum 21 hours ago
Comment by foota 19 hours ago
Comment by adrianN 21 hours ago
Comment by goopypoop 21 hours ago
Comment by grugdev42 18 hours ago
Hyperion is a great read for anyone looking for their next scifi book BTW. :)
Comment by tkgally 20 hours ago
https://metropolisjapan.com/why-wooden-architecture-is-makin...
Comment by japanuspus 20 hours ago
Comment by HPsquared 15 hours ago
Comment by exikyut 20 hours ago
Comment by anovikov 20 hours ago
Comment by kergonath 18 hours ago
That said, wood can be treated to remove quite a lot of stuff, leaving behind a strong porous structure that can be filled with various things to tweak its properties.
Comment by trhway 23 hours ago
"has a 50% greater tensile strength than steel and a strength-to-weight ratio that’s 10 times better. "
Comment by coryrc 19 hours ago
Comment by aspenmayer 17 hours ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/InventWood
> In 2018, [Liangbing] Hu's laboratory reported that partially removing lignin from natural wood and then compressing the remaining cellulose under heat produced a material roughly three times denser than the original timber and an order of magnitude stronger in bending and tension.[2] The material was commercially named Superwood.
> [2]: https://doi.org/10.1038%2Fnature25476 | https://www.nature.com/articles/nature25476
Comment by coryrc 4 hours ago
Comment by syntaxing 21 hours ago
Comment by moomoo11 22 hours ago
Comment by throwup238 20 hours ago
Comment by moomoo11 19 hours ago
i'm no expert at this stuff, but i used to live in a home that had a bamboo garden maintained by a housemate. that stuff was so strong, i used it to make a box lol
Comment by throwup238 8 hours ago
That’s not to say it’s not strong enough necessarily, but building with bamboo requires different construction techniques and people are still working on validating its safety and updating building codes, which takes decades.
Comment by davafons 20 hours ago
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Comment by Rebelgecko 21 hours ago