00:00On May 21, 2010, Japan launched the first solar sail into space.
00:09Solar sail technology uses light for spacecraft propulsion, but not in the same way that traditional solar panels do.
00:15While solar panels use light to generate electricity,
00:18spacecraft with solar sails rely only on the light itself to cruise through outer space.
00:22Particles of light called photons actually push the spacecraft forward.
00:26A single photon cannot accomplish this on its own.
00:29But with enough photons striking a spacecraft, propulsion is possible.
00:33You just need a big surface to catch all that light.
00:36Scientists have been toying with this idea since the 1800s,
00:39but Japan finally proved that it was possible when the country launched the IKAROS mission.
00:44The mission's name stands for Interplanetary Kite Craft Accelerated by Radiation of the Sun.
00:50This experimental spacecraft had a 2,100 square foot sail that looked like a giant space kite.
00:56Japan's space agency was also able to steer the spacecraft by controlling the orientation of liquid crystals and LCD panels that were built into the solar sail.
01:04IKAROS sailed all the way to Venus in just six months before continuing on its orbit around the Sun.
01:10And that's what happened on this day in space.
01:12And that's what happened on this day in space.
01:17IKAROS
01:21IKAROS
01:23IKAROS
01:25IKAROS
01:27IKAROS
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