Space is filled with cosmic rays that are high-energy particles. If we could convert that energy into electric (or any other) energy, then we could use it to power a rocket anywhere in the universe. If that is not possible, why not?
1 Answer
The problem is with the low energy density of cosmic rays in the universe. Individual cosmic rays are indeed very energetic, but there just aren't enough of them to be a significant power source for interplanetary or interstellar vehicles. The Wikipedia article about cosmic rays (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_ray) quotes the energy density of cosmic rays in interstellar space as roughly 1 eV per cubic cm, or 10^6 eV per cubic meter, which is only ~1.6 x 10^-13 Joules per cubic meter. Cosmic rays are so energetic that they're all traveling at nearly the speed of light, so if you multiply 1 square meter by the speed of light (~3 x 10^8 m/s), then multiply by the volume energy density just stated, you get the average energy flux density, which winds up being ~5 x 10^-5 Watts per square meter. Wow, that's not much! If you could convert that energy to electric power with 100% efficiency, it would take a collecting area of nearly 21,000 square meters (a square ~144 meters on a side) to collect one Watt.
The Wikipedia article also states that the cosmic ray flux inside our solar system's heliopause is about a tenth that in the interstellar medium.
Using cosmic ray energy sounds like a good idea at first, but the realities of the universe say no.
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2$\begingroup$ It is not only the low energy density, it is also the very low efficiency of the conversion to electric energy. $\endgroup$– UweMay 7, 2018 at 19:32
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2$\begingroup$ @Uwe , the reason I postulated 100% efficiency is that it shows that no matter what the efficiency is, it isn't a practical source of power. But indeed, even speculative conversion techniques suffer from low efficiency. $\endgroup$ May 7, 2018 at 19:38
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$\begingroup$ Still not that hopeless for sustaining "sleep mode" during interstellar travel, or burst signals, say, a second of communication per month. What are the efficiency rates? $\endgroup$– SF.May 8, 2018 at 10:02
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$\begingroup$ Would it be possible to build a magnetic "lens" to usfully concentrate [some of] this radiation? The lens would be a set of superconducting wire loops, many kilometers across (but only massing as much as a few 10s of km of thin wire) and the hope would be achieve a useful energy density on a collector, which would probably be flying separately, at a focal point which might be thousands of kilometers away. $\endgroup$ May 8, 2018 at 10:51
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1$\begingroup$ @SteveLinton Since cosmic rays have such a broad distribution in momentum, a (magic) magnetic lens that performed say a 1000:1 ratio of diameter to circle of least confusion of one energy and particle type would perform miserably even for the same particle type with even a 1% difference in energy, so you'd have to go after a achromatic electromagnetic lens design. And while solenoidal magnetic lenses do in fact focus, it's a second order effect and therefore a fairly weak lens, which is why quadrupole pairs are used wherever possible, and solenoids mostly get used for low energy electrons. $\endgroup$– uhohMay 8, 2018 at 15:15