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1. Reuben+o1[view] [source] 2025-10-22 11:34:42
>>jonbae+(OP)
Last time these folks were mentioned on HN, there was a lot of skepticism that this is really possible to do. The issue is cooling: in space, you can't rely on convection or conduction to do passive cooling, so you can only radiate away heat. However, the radiator would need to be several kilometers big to provide enough cooling, and obviously launching such a large object into space would therefore eat up any cost savings from the "free" solar power.

More discussion: >>43977188

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2. deepan+MA[view] [source] 2025-10-22 14:32:56
>>Reuben+o1
Not sure if I follow really. Cooling from it's own generated heat? Are we even sure the system would get that hot in the first place? The temperatures can plunge up to -200 degrees. If needed, they'd cool it just like they keep the James Webb Telescope cool.
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3. BadBad+ZC[view] [source] 2025-10-22 14:43:24
>>deepan+MA
Keeping things cool in space is very hard. On earth we usually transfer heat from one medium to another (water to water, water to air, etc.). In space that's not possible because even though the matter in space is quite cold, there is very little. Therefore the only real way to get rid of heat in space is to radiate it away (think infrared light bulb). The James Webb Telescope does the same thing.
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