I understand the "no convection," but it's not really obvious how a few (or multiple) reflecting layers are going to stop all that radiated heat.spread-tee wrote: ↑Fri Apr 15, 2022 8:23 pm It's like being in a vacuum flask, no convection and hardly any conduction to worry about, so if you can stop the radiative energy then all the heat leaks out into space which has an ambient temp of about 5 deg K IIRC.
Desp
With no convection possible at all, it must depend on the efficiency of the reflective surfaces and attrition!
Surface 1 reflects 99.9%. Surface 2 receives 0.1% radiated from the back of #1, reflects 99.9% and passes 0.01% (0.00001 of the original?) on to the next layer. Maybe it is that simple.
Presumably the 6 Kelvins is as low as it is worth trying to achieve if deep space is 5K anyway. How would you use any active cooling to get below it? Unless you could somehow transport the energy to a radiator to beam it off into space, whereupon the 5K ambient would warm it back up anyway!
A