

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Mike Acs

This is what an artist envisioned the Solar Power Satellite would look like. Shown is the assembly of a microwave transmission antenna. The solar power satellite was to be located in a geosynchronous orbit, 36,000 miles above the Earth’s surface.
Image credit: NASA
Image source: NASA on The Commons

Image credit: Boeing
Image source: National Archives

Image credit: Boeing
Image source: Internet Archive

In the aftermath of the ’70s oil crisis, Boeing designed a solar power satellite system that could supply most of the the United States with electricity. Boeing’s plan envisioned satellites the size of small cities placed in geosynchronous orbit, transmitting electrical energy back to Earth as microwaves. The satellites would either be constructed in low Earth orbit for later deployment into a higher orbit or constructed directly at the higher orbit.
Image credit: Boeing
Image source: SDASM Archives

Image credit: Boeing
Image source: National Archives

Image credit: North American Rockwell
Image source: Numbers Station

Image credit: NASA
Image source: SDASM Archives

Image credit: NASA
Image source: SDASM Archives