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Was NERVA type or other nuclear engines ever considered for the space
shuttle? Do they generally release any radioactive materials or is this completely contained? Is it still contained in failure modes? Thanks, David |
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![]() David Findlay wrote: Was NERVA type or other nuclear engines ever considered for the space shuttle? Do they generally release any radioactive materials or is this completely contained? Is it still contained in failure modes? Thanks, David Nerva is very radioactive. I don't know how much is in the exhaust but the engine itself is very radioactive and would not be at all suitable for a space shuttle. Mike Walsh |
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David Findlay wrote
Was NERVA type or other nuclear engines ever considered for the space shuttle? Not for propelling it. There may have been paper studies done on hauling non-operating nuclear engines to orbit on the shuttle. Do they generally release any radioactive materials or is this completely contained? Depends on the design, but in general NERVA and similar solid-core reactors would have little radioactivity in the exhaust. (But lots of neutrons and gammas escaping from the engine itself while it's running, still significant amounts post-shutdown.) Is it still contained in failure modes? Like any fission reactor, a sufficiently serious accident could release fission products into the environment. That's why proposals for nuclear engines these days almost always call for them to be started up only after they're in trajectories that don't return to Earth. |
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David Findlay wrote in
u: Was NERVA type or other nuclear engines ever considered for the space shuttle? Do they generally release any radioactive materials or is this completely contained? Is it still contained in failure modes? Thanks, Aside from radiation issues, it's doubtful the nuclear engines could generate enough thrust at comparable weights to the existing SSMEs. But the idea is intriguing if we could ignore the radiation issue; make the ET a single large hydrogen tank which would weigh much less without the relatively heavy LOX and double the Isp and you'll get the general idea. The SRBs would have to work a bit harder and somewhat longer, I would think to compensate for the lower thrust of the nuclear engines. But there might be substantial increase in payload/altitude. Maybe not a "lunar shuttle". It's just that the direct radiation from the engine/ reactors probably makes the idea a non-starter. --Damon |
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The NERVA engines of the Apollo era were pretty dirty as were the Aircraft
Nuclear Propulsion (ANP) engines that were ground-tested between 1956-61. The ANP tests released about 4.6 million curies of radioactive stuff into the atmosphere (the Hiroshima bomb released about 3 million curies). Of course, the ANP release was negligible compared to the radioactivity released in the 1950s by above-ground nuclear weapons tests. The really big release of radioactivity in the NERVA program occurred on 21 Jan 1965. NASA and the AEC (who were jointly developing the NERVA engines) decided to see what would happen if one of these 1000 megawatt+ (thermal) reactors was pushed to the limit. In the Transient Nuclear Test (TNT) a Kiwi B-4E reactor was deliberately driven to overload (without hydrogen propellant flowing through the core). The resulting thermo-mechanical (not nuclear) explosion vaporized 5-15% of the reactor core and scatted reactor parts over a circular area of 4 nautical mile radius. The radioactivity from this extremely dirty test in the Nevada desert north of Las Vegas was tracked to LA and out over the Pacific Ocean. NERVA along with the Apollo program was cancelled in 1972 by the Nixon Administration. All of the NERVA/Phoebus reactors and engines wound up buried in the Nevada desert. During the Star Wars days of the 1980s, the SDIO planned to resurrect the pebble-bed nuclear reactor/engine for use in the upper stages of a heavy lift launch vehicle that would orbit the massive laser and particle beam battle stations envisioned by the Star Wars enthusiasts (I spent about 6 years working on the the neutral particle beam payload). The pebble bed bit the dust along with most of the other exotic Star Wars stuff in 1993 when the Clinton Administration came to town. Testing a nuclear engine these days would be a nightmare because of the environmental concerns. All of this ancient history is covered in Chapter 25 of my recent (2002) book on U.S. manned spaceflight in the 20th century Later Ray Schmitt "David Findlay" wrote in message u... Was NERVA type or other nuclear engines ever considered for the space shuttle? Do they generally release any radioactive materials or is this completely contained? Is it still contained in failure modes? Thanks, David |
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