Space supergun

Author
Discussion

LittleSwill

Original Poster:

268 posts

213 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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I recently saw a program saying that you could develop a supergun to cheaply fire non-fragile objects (water, oxygen, chicken and leak soup) into space. Is it doable or a load of rubbish?

Eric Mc

122,086 posts

266 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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Not going to work for a launch from the surface of the earth - or any body that has a reasonable atmosphere. An object leaving the barrel of a gun would have to be travelling at orbital velocity as it exits the barrel. For earth, that means 17,500 mph. In fact, to overcome atmospheric drag near the surface of the earth, it would need to be travelling even faster than that so that by the time it reached the top of the atmopshere it still retained at least a speed of 17,500 mph parallel to the earth's surface.

The vast bulk of man made objects would simply melt due to atmosphetric friction long before they'd managed to get above the atmosphere.

It might work on an airless body, such as the moon or an asteroid.

jingars

1,095 posts

241 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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There are studies that investigate the idea of using an electro-magnetic "rail gun" to launch sturdy payloads (fuel, water, powefully built company directors, etc.) into orbit, but that uses something more akin to a track than a traditional gun barrel and one big bang.

It was mooted that if a "space tugs" were in use in low earth orbit, refuelling and repositioning satellites, then the rail gun could present a cost effective solution to re-supplying the space tugs; if you lost a few payloads of fuel then it wouldn't be too much of an economic loss.

For the reasons given by Eric, I am not convinced it really is a runner for a planet like Earth, which has such a deep gravity well. If we want to lift payloads from the Moon (if we were mining Helium 3 for example) then it might work well.


PugwasHDJ80

7,529 posts

222 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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The only real way of lifting stuf cheaply and freely will be with a space elevator- and we might be getting to the stage of having structures which are strong enough!

jingars

1,095 posts

241 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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US Navy's enclosed barrel rail gun

Wouldn't want that going off near me!

Buff Mchugelarge

3,316 posts

151 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
LittleSwill said:
I recently saw a program saying that you could develop a supergun to cheaply fire non-fragile objects (water, oxygen, chicken and leak soup) into space. Is it doable or a load of rubbish?
Got one in the garden now you mention it.
Quicker than dropping my boy to school by bus

Eric Mc

122,086 posts

266 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
Buff Mchugelarge said:
LittleSwill said:
I recently saw a program saying that you could develop a supergun to cheaply fire non-fragile objects (water, oxygen, chicken and leak soup) into space. Is it doable or a load of rubbish?
Got one in the garden now you mention it.
Quicker than dropping my boy to school by bus
Pity he arrives at school looking a bit like jam on toast.

carmonk

7,910 posts

188 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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You're asking if I could develop a cheap supergun to fire oxygen into space? I think the answer's no, although I am able to heft a frozen chicken into orbit on account of being powerfully built.

LittleSwill

Original Poster:

268 posts

213 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
quotequote all
I was thinking more along the lines of tinned soup. It sounds like the friction would cook it to perfection.

I could settle for a broth if a creamy soup is too difficult.

Otispunkmeyer

12,618 posts

156 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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Wasn't there something called the HARP or SHARP gun or similar? Something like that. Basically a large scale conventional gun.

Km/s projectile speeds. Acceleration would also be brutal!!!

Rail guns have their own problems. Like the power/energy storage and avoiding melting of the rails due to the incredibly high currents. Maybe you could tone it down from a weapon style to something larger and longer with more gradual power input and gentler acceleration.

I can't imagine you'd have much control over where or even if it gets to orbit.

Space elevator seems a better bet. If that would work.

hairykrishna

13,185 posts

204 months

Wednesday 18th January 2012
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The idea of the HARP successors, as proposed by the bloke who designed Iraqs 'supergun', was to shoot rockets I think. Brings down the muzzle velocity to something manageable.

MartG

20,696 posts

205 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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hairykrishna said:
the bloke who designed Iraqs 'supergun',
Dr Gerry Bull, assassinated by the Israelis (allegedly) to stop him building it

dudleybloke

19,872 posts

187 months

Saturday 21st January 2012
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you need a thunderwell.

http://atomicrockets.posterous.com/thunder-well

Edited by dudleybloke on Saturday 21st January 17:57

maffski

1,868 posts

160 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
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Eric Mc said:
Buff Mchugelarge said:
LittleSwill said:
I recently saw a program saying that you could develop a supergun to cheaply fire non-fragile objects (water, oxygen, chicken and leak soup) into space. Is it doable or a load of rubbish?
Got one in the garden now you mention it.
Quicker than dropping my boy to school by bus
Pity he arrives at school looking a bit like jam on toast.
That's not nice, lots of children suffer from acne!


Anything you can do to reduce the weight of fuel you need to carry must potentially make sense, a rail gun has the advantage that you can accelerate slowly - adding speed along the launch track rather than a big bang in the breeches.

Although NASA have issuesd a press release, which is usually a good sign that it's rubbish.

annodomini2

6,868 posts

252 months

Monday 23rd January 2012
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maffski said:
That's not nice, lots of children suffer from acne!


Anything you can do to reduce the weight of fuel you need to carry must potentially make sense, a rail gun has the advantage that you can accelerate slowly - adding speed along the launch track rather than a big bang in the breeches.

Although NASA have issuesd a press release, which is usually a good sign that it's rubbish.
Rail launch is one of those ideas that is great on paper, but financially and technically flawed.

The maximum deltaV you could probably run is about 500-600mph. Supersonic is not impossible, but impractical due to the sonic boom. So you still need to find your other 17,000mph of deltaV.

As a result the rocket/spaceplane would still have to be huge!

Skylon is the best of the current active development programs imo.

It's intended to be SSTO and fully reusable, not to mention British.

mrmr96

13,736 posts

205 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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annodomini2 said:
Rail launch is one of those ideas that is great on paper, but financially and technically flawed.

The maximum deltaV you could probably run is about 500-600mph. Supersonic is not impossible, but impractical due to the sonic boom. So you still need to find your other 17,000mph of deltaV.

As a result the rocket/spaceplane would still have to be huge!
That NASA article says that the rail gets you the first 600mph, which is enough to launch a vehicle that uses SCRAM jets. My understanding of a SCRAM jet is that it's similar to a normal gas turbine engine on a plane, except that it doesn't actually use a spinning compressor and turbine. Instead it just has a tapering combustion chamber so incoming air is compressed by the shape of the engine. This allows it to operate at very very high speeds and high altitudes, but the SCRAM jet doesn't work at low speed, hence the requirement for the rail launch. The article goes on to say that the actual payload would be rocket launched from the SCRAM jet vehicle once it reaches the edge of space.

I didn't see any fundamental flaws. (Not saying I can knock one up in the garden like, but doesn't sound implausible.)

EDLT

15,421 posts

207 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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jingars said:
US Navy's enclosed barrel rail gun

Wouldn't want that going off near me!
I read a rant by an American about the Navy buying their railguns from foreign companies. Most of them were British biggrin

annodomini2

6,868 posts

252 months

Tuesday 24th January 2012
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mrmr96 said:
annodomini2 said:
Rail launch is one of those ideas that is great on paper, but financially and technically flawed.

The maximum deltaV you could probably run is about 500-600mph. Supersonic is not impossible, but impractical due to the sonic boom. So you still need to find your other 17,000mph of deltaV.

As a result the rocket/spaceplane would still have to be huge!
That NASA article says that the rail gets you the first 600mph, which is enough to launch a vehicle that uses SCRAM jets. My understanding of a SCRAM jet is that it's similar to a normal gas turbine engine on a plane, except that it doesn't actually use a spinning compressor and turbine. Instead it just has a tapering combustion chamber so incoming air is compressed by the shape of the engine. This allows it to operate at very very high speeds and high altitudes, but the SCRAM jet doesn't work at low speed, hence the requirement for the rail launch. The article goes on to say that the actual payload would be rocket launched from the SCRAM jet vehicle once it reaches the edge of space.

I didn't see any fundamental flaws. (Not saying I can knock one up in the garden like, but doesn't sound implausible.)
A SCRAM will not work at 600mph, as it's a Supersonic Combustion RAM Jet, basically it uses the forward motion of the craft through the air, to compress the air stream in the inlet. The air passing through a SCRAM jet needs to be supersonic for the engine to work.

A RAM jet would would, but would struggle to go supersonic, a SRAM may work at these speeds, but you would need a SRAM and then a SCRAM jet to see major benefits.

Then you need a conventional rocket to get you into orbit.

The issue is the launcher gets more and more complex. You're back to the same issues that blighted the shuttle.

The more systems you add, the more complex the total system becomes and the increased likelyhood of failure goes up exponentially.

Additionally if these systems are not off the shelf tech then these need to be developed, adding to the cost. More systems and that cost gets muliplied.


Brigand

2,544 posts

170 months

Wednesday 25th January 2012
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EDLT said:
I read a rant by an American about the Navy buying their railguns from foreign companies. Most of them were British biggrin
I was talking with an ex-Army tank driver around eight years ago, and he mentioned whilst drunk, that he had spent a couple of years on a tank trialing team testing lots of stuff on how to improve the tanks. Most of it was mundane things like adding extra hooks on the deck so screens can be put up to shield crew on top of it from the sun, what extra bits could make the crew's lives easier, stuff like that, but he did mention that he had been involved with trialing rail guns on the tanks, that sounded pretty interesting!