Mars in 39 days!
Discussion
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/10/05/vasimr_200...
Exrtact;
The superpowered rocket design is known as the Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR), and it is under development by former NASA astronaut and physicist Franklin Chang Díaz at his spinout company Ad Astra Rocket. Last week the experimental VX-200 test rig - which is partly British made - reached its full rated 200 kilowatt power, an achievement described by the firm as a "highly coveted milestone".
Exrtact;
The superpowered rocket design is known as the Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR), and it is under development by former NASA astronaut and physicist Franklin Chang Díaz at his spinout company Ad Astra Rocket. Last week the experimental VX-200 test rig - which is partly British made - reached its full rated 200 kilowatt power, an achievement described by the firm as a "highly coveted milestone".
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
OK, say you have the engine. Now get me the power source.
Small nuke or solar power.While I'm all for certifying an actual reactor core for spaceflight (again - the Russians did this with liquid metal cooling units on Radar Ocean Surveillance birds) I have my doubts about whether the political will is there.
In the shorter term, I'd still prefer a NTR (Nuclear Thermal Rocket) design. It gives you, give or take, the same kind of Earth-Mars transit times, but at a lower development risk and cost, especially as the nuclear element is much similar to an RTG (as used for decades for space power) than a fully fledged reactor.
The basic design has been about since the 60s and has actually been tested under the NERVA project. In essence you pump liquid hydrogen over an exposed nuclear core to heat the hydrogen, with the option of injecting a small amount of liquid oxygen into the exhaust as an afterburner. The nice thing is you can reconfigure the propulsive core as a generator core to provide power for the flight.
Edited by bobthemonkey on Monday 12th October 21:48
bobthemonkey said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
OK, say you have the engine. Now get me the power source.
Small nuke or solar power.While I'm all for certifying an actual reactor core for spaceflight (again - the Russians did this with liquid metal cooling units on Radar Ocean Surveillance birds) I have my doubts about whether the political will is there.
In the shorter term, I'd still prefer a NTR (Nuclear Thermal Rocket) design. It gives you, give or take, the same kind of Earth-Mars transit times, but at a lower development risk and cost, especially as the nuclear element is much similar to an RTG (as used for decades for space power) than a fully fledged reactor.
The basic design has been about since the 60s and has actually been tested under the NERVA project. In essence you pump liquid hydrogen over an exposed nuclear core to heat the hydrogen, with the option of injecting a small amount of liquid oxygen into the exhaust as an afterburner. The nice thing is you can reconfigure the propulsive core as a generator core to provide power for the flight.
Edited by bobthemonkey on Monday 12th October 21:48
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
OK, say you have the engine. Now get me the power source.
Small nuke or solar power.While I'm all for certifying an actual reactor core for spaceflight (again - the Russians did this with liquid metal cooling units on Radar Ocean Surveillance birds) I have my doubts about whether the political will is there.
In the shorter term, I'd still prefer a NTR (Nuclear Thermal Rocket) design. It gives you, give or take, the same kind of Earth-Mars transit times, but at a lower development risk and cost, especially as the nuclear element is much similar to an RTG (as used for decades for space power) than a fully fledged reactor.
The basic design has been about since the 60s and has actually been tested under the NERVA project. In essence you pump liquid hydrogen over an exposed nuclear core to heat the hydrogen, with the option of injecting a small amount of liquid oxygen into the exhaust as an afterburner. The nice thing is you can reconfigure the propulsive core as a generator core to provide power for the flight.
Edited by bobthemonkey on Monday 12th October 21:48
Even the smallest designs - which I *think* is probably that fitted to NR1 - would be too big and heavy. Plute batteries would probably be a better option in terms of weight and simplicity - not sure whether they'd generate enough power though as it's not an area I know much about.
rhinochopig said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
OK, say you have the engine. Now get me the power source.
Small nuke or solar power.While I'm all for certifying an actual reactor core for spaceflight (again - the Russians did this with liquid metal cooling units on Radar Ocean Surveillance birds) I have my doubts about whether the political will is there.
In the shorter term, I'd still prefer a NTR (Nuclear Thermal Rocket) design. It gives you, give or take, the same kind of Earth-Mars transit times, but at a lower development risk and cost, especially as the nuclear element is much similar to an RTG (as used for decades for space power) than a fully fledged reactor.
The basic design has been about since the 60s and has actually been tested under the NERVA project. In essence you pump liquid hydrogen over an exposed nuclear core to heat the hydrogen, with the option of injecting a small amount of liquid oxygen into the exhaust as an afterburner. The nice thing is you can reconfigure the propulsive core as a generator core to provide power for the flight.
Edited by bobthemonkey on Monday 12th October 21:48
Even the smallest designs - which I *think* is probably that fitted to NR1 - would be too big and heavy. Plute batteries would probably be a better option in terms of weight and simplicity - not sure whether they'd generate enough power though as it's not an area I know much about.
s2art said:
rhinochopig said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
OK, say you have the engine. Now get me the power source.
Small nuke or solar power.While I'm all for certifying an actual reactor core for spaceflight (again - the Russians did this with liquid metal cooling units on Radar Ocean Surveillance birds) I have my doubts about whether the political will is there.
In the shorter term, I'd still prefer a NTR (Nuclear Thermal Rocket) design. It gives you, give or take, the same kind of Earth-Mars transit times, but at a lower development risk and cost, especially as the nuclear element is much similar to an RTG (as used for decades for space power) than a fully fledged reactor.
The basic design has been about since the 60s and has actually been tested under the NERVA project. In essence you pump liquid hydrogen over an exposed nuclear core to heat the hydrogen, with the option of injecting a small amount of liquid oxygen into the exhaust as an afterburner. The nice thing is you can reconfigure the propulsive core as a generator core to provide power for the flight.
Edited by bobthemonkey on Monday 12th October 21:48
Even the smallest designs - which I *think* is probably that fitted to NR1 - would be too big and heavy. Plute batteries would probably be a better option in terms of weight and simplicity - not sure whether they'd generate enough power though as it's not an area I know much about.
a) you can't shut them down, because if you do they freeze solid.
b) there are issues relating to the potential for voids in the channels, which can cause fuel damage at best and at worst an explosion - one of the reasons why the UK dropped NaK technology.
c) A small failure could result in the mixing of primary and secondary coolants - NaK and water don't mix.
Safer designs use CO2/water or water/water technology but they are less energy dense and heavier still and also need gravity to operate.
An effectively "solid state" design like a plute battery would be better if you can get the power out of it - as I said before I have no idea what sort of power output you get from an RTG
rhinochopig said:
s2art said:
rhinochopig said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
s2art said:
bobthemonkey said:
OK, say you have the engine. Now get me the power source.
Small nuke or solar power.While I'm all for certifying an actual reactor core for spaceflight (again - the Russians did this with liquid metal cooling units on Radar Ocean Surveillance birds) I have my doubts about whether the political will is there.
In the shorter term, I'd still prefer a NTR (Nuclear Thermal Rocket) design. It gives you, give or take, the same kind of Earth-Mars transit times, but at a lower development risk and cost, especially as the nuclear element is much similar to an RTG (as used for decades for space power) than a fully fledged reactor.
The basic design has been about since the 60s and has actually been tested under the NERVA project. In essence you pump liquid hydrogen over an exposed nuclear core to heat the hydrogen, with the option of injecting a small amount of liquid oxygen into the exhaust as an afterburner. The nice thing is you can reconfigure the propulsive core as a generator core to provide power for the flight.
Edited by bobthemonkey on Monday 12th October 21:48
Even the smallest designs - which I *think* is probably that fitted to NR1 - would be too big and heavy. Plute batteries would probably be a better option in terms of weight and simplicity - not sure whether they'd generate enough power though as it's not an area I know much about.
a) you can't shut them down, because if you do they freeze solid.
b) there are issues relating to the potential for voids in the channels, which can cause fuel damage at best and at worst an explosion - one of the reasons why the UK dropped NaK technology.
c) A small failure could result in the mixing of primary and secondary coolants - NaK and water don't mix.
Safer designs use CO2/water or water/water technology but they are less energy dense and heavier still and also need gravity to operate.
An effectively "solid state" design like a plute battery would be better if you can get the power out of it - as I said before I have no idea what sort of power output you get from an RTG
http://nextbigfuture.com/2009/10/vasimr-uranium-hy...
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