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http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=9926 talks all about
electric ion engines but doesn't mention nerva type engines. Why? |
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"Bar Code" wrote:
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=9926 talks all about electric ion engines but doesn't mention nerva type engines. Why? The "N-Word" in NERVA is Nuclear. That's why. |
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Bar Code wrote
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=9926 talks all about electric ion engines but doesn't mention nerva type engines. Why? He's concerned with very high Isp engines; Nerva-style nuclear thermal rockets have Isps only modestly higher than chemical ones. (Note that in the rocket equation, "modestly higher" can make a substantial difference in system performance for some applications.) |
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![]() "Bar Code" wrote in message ... http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=9926 talks all about electric ion engines but doesn't mention nerva type engines. Why? Umm, because he didn't feel like it? Keep in mind he's writing these leters on his own time for his own pleasure. |
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jeff findley wrote:
Even better would be a dual mode nuclear engine that could produce high thrust exhaust or electricity. Use the electricity for cruise mode where something like an ion or plasma engine is more efficient, but use the high thrust nuclear engine for entering and leaving the planned planetary orbit (to save time). One can also design a nuclear engine that produces some electricity with the propellant itself. There are large unnecessary entropy producing steps in a conventional nuclear thermal rocket (for example, when injecting cooler propellant into a hot thrust chamber); it's possible to design the engine to instead extract additional work. This would not require external radiators. One could use this electrical energy in a kind of arc afterburner downstream of the reactor, to heat the propellant to above the temperature limit of the reactor's materials. Paul |
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William Elliot wrote:
On Fri, 8 Aug 2003, Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: "Bar Code" wrote in message http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewsr.html?pid=9926 talks all about electric ion engines but doesn't mention nerva type engines. Why? Umm, because he didn't feel like it? Keep in mind he's writing these leters on his own time for his own pleasure. They're great, much better reading than ISS status reports. How can I email him thanks for his letters, recommend to NASA that allowance be made for other ISSonaughts to write such letters. What's a hand shake like aboard ISS? Like any other, except I imagine you'd tend to set both participants into some sort of oscillation, if they're not secured in some manner. Can I blow somebody away, can I blow myself or equipment away? Yes, but not easily. Mass/inertia are still the same. You could find yourself hyperventilating, if the equipment is more than, say, a free-floating laptop computer.... If I've a peanut floating before me can I suck it in? Sure. Plenty of video of astronauts/cosmonauts doing such things. Water can be espically interesting, as long as you don't let it break up. Without touching anything and starting from from motionless can I swim thru air or turn summersaults? That's been done, too. I've sometimes wondered what sort of performance one would get feom one (or preferably a pair) of those small, battery powered handheld fans under these conditions.... How many balls can an ISSonaught juggle at once? Juggling as we usually think of it wouldn't work. One assumes gravity will bring the objects back down. |
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