Space Sports - Sailing in Space
Paper in proceeding, 2016

Titan is the largest moon of Saturn, and apart from the Earth it is the only body in our solar system where a liquid exists on the surface. Within the last ten years a system of lakes and rivers have been discovered. The climate and seasonal cycles of Titan are still not very well known, but the composition and pressure are fairly well established. Perhaps in the future boats will sail the lakes of Titan for research purposes or even sport. The purpose of this paper is to give an overview of the concept of space sports, the conditions of Titan and to calculate important parameters of sailing such as floatability, stability, hull resistance and sail forces. This paper shows that if a sailing yacht on Titan will have twice as large displacement as on Earth, it will be 2.6 times less stable for the same beam. Since friction will be smaller, it will be faster than on Earth at low speed, but significantly slower at high speeds due to the wave generation. The same sail area is required to get the same sail forces if the average wind is 3 m/s, while a 9 times larger sail area is required for if the wind speed is only 1 m/s.

Sports

Titan

Space

Sailing

Hydrodynamics

Author

Maria Sundin

University of Gothenburg

Lars Larsson

Chalmers, Shipping and Marine Technology, Marine Technology

Christian Finnsgård

SSPA Sweden AB

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Logistics & Transportation

Proceedings from icSports 2016, 4th International Conference on Sport Sciences Research and Technology Support, Porto, Portugal, 7-9 november 2016

141-146
978-989-758-205-9 (ISBN)

Areas of Advance

Transport

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Aerospace Engineering

Other Engineering and Technologies

Astronomy, Astrophysics and Cosmology

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.5220/0006086701410146

More information

Latest update

5/20/2022