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I lay watching Mars the other night, and I thought about how we might
build a ship to take people there. In a lot of ways, we are like ancient man right after he has built his first boat, yet we are trying to cross oceans in our flimsy craft. It seems to me that we need something with a lot of volume for long distances. It doesn't need a lot of mass, maybe something like a big bubble. The pressure hull need not be terribly strong, but it should be protected from impacts inside or outside the vehicle. Of course, the docking ports would need to be stronger, and so there would probably be some sort of skeleton that is much stronger than the pressure hull. I like the plan to have a perpetually cycling ferry running between Earth and Mars. It could be a simple craft. Maybe we could beam power to it, perhaps by laser to solar panels? Then, we would could have simpler, lighter and safer power for the astronauts (the only realistic alternative would be nuclear reactor, which is fine for unmanned craft, but not so great for manned). The engines could be ion engines, using an inert gas, so there would be less risk of explosion or poisoning by the fuel. What other sorts of things might differ between this interplanetary ship and the vehicles we currently have? |
#2
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(Richard Alexander) writes:
I like the plan to have a perpetually cycling ferry running between Earth and Mars. It could be a simple craft. I like the idea of a cycler, too. http://www.spacer.com/news/tourism-02b.html http://clowder.net/hop/railroad/railroad.html Maybe we could beam power to it, perhaps by laser to solar panels? Then, we would could have simpler, lighter and safer power for the astronauts (the only realistic alternative would be nuclear reactor, which is fine for unmanned craft, but not so great for manned). Beaming wouldn't be practical: once an orbit or so it would be behind the Sun. There would also have to be multiple beaming stations on the Moon since the Moon revolves. In addition, I don't think you could focus a beam at interplanetary distances (without a REALLY big lens). I'm in favor of one or more nuclear reactors, perhaps with solar panels as alternates. It seems to me that we need something with a lot of volume for long distances. It doesn't need a lot of mass, maybe something like a big bubble. ASSUMING the human body needs some "gravity" to stay healthy in the long run, we need some rotation. I favor a central core, with storage, landers, main engines, etc., and two habitat modules on long cables or "towers" (masts for rigidity). At 2 rpm and .5 g, the cables or towers would be 450 m each. In comparison, the Eiffel Tower is 300 m, the Petronas Towers are 452 m, and the CN Tower is 553 m. To accelerate, the cycler could reel in the habitats, if they were on cables, or have strong enough masts or towers (or have independent and coordinated rockets on each section). -paul- -- Paul E. Black |
#3
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Paul B:
Richard A: I like the plan to have a perpetually cycling ferry running between Earth and Mars. It could be a simple craft. I like the idea of a cycler, too. ----- Like the idea, but would go unmanned at first and bootstrap using scrap. No space rock required with over 180 tons of aluminum in orbit. Russia has a small number of reactors up and station-keeping ion engines will be more plentiful. Add large antennas and new programmable control systems to be combined with the excellent but less than state of the art sensors in orbit and a few new sensors as required. The building site would be a telerobotic platform in geostationary orbit, itself partially built from available materials using a solar furnace to extrude tubing and die cast joints. The thinking is along the lines of a long spaceframe with an array of attachment points for container freight. At first this would go out with exploration craft and generic supplies including survival gear. Early returns would be mostly samples. Later trips could include landing craft, fuel, and bulk supplies for early flag-planting events. Space station modules.... I always wanted to do this, but I'll cheer on anyone who creates the hardware or any related system. -- Anvil* |
#4
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(Paul E. Black) wrote in message ...
(Richard Alexander) writes: [snip] Maybe we could beam power to it, perhaps by laser to solar panels? Then, we would could have simpler, lighter and safer power for the astronauts (the only realistic alternative would be nuclear reactor, which is fine for unmanned craft, but not so great for manned). Beaming wouldn't be practical: once an orbit or so it would be behind the Sun. That depends on where one places the transmitter. We could also have more than one transmitter. We could have a transmitter on Mars and Moon. We could have transmitters out of the ecliptic plane. We could have orbiters out of the ecliptic plane. Indeed, we could have orbiters that are massive, unmanned power plants, beaming power to spacecraft thousands of kilometers away. There would also have to be multiple beaming stations on the Moon since the Moon revolves. In addition, I don't think you could focus a beam at interplanetary distances (without a REALLY big lens). My rough estimate shows me that a 10 meter telescope could focus a beam from Earth to Mars down to less-than a one-meter spot at 400 nm wavelength. This exceeds our requirements, but is not too technically difficult. http://www.de.afrl.af.mil/News/2003/03-36.html http://www.coseti.org/radobs14.htm I'm in favor of one or more nuclear reactors, perhaps with solar panels as alternates. I believe that any serious deep space exploration will require some type of nuclear energy, at least in our lifetimes. But, I don't believe that nuclear reactors on vessels containing humans are a good match, due to radiation hazards. Shielding is expensive and heavy, and placing the reactor on a long boom complicates the design. If we can simply beam power to the ship, we could shrink the size of the shipboard power plant down to a small closet. It seems to me that we need something with a lot of volume for long distances. It doesn't need a lot of mass, maybe something like a big bubble. ASSUMING the human body needs some "gravity" to stay healthy in the long run, we need some rotation. That is one of my main concerns. I believe we need gravity to remain healthy. I believe that a big, rotating vessel (or segment of a vessel) is better with less mass and simplier mechanics. Thus, beam the power to the ship, rather than carrying a full-scale power plant aboard ship. They could still have back-up generators, that would provide emergency power. Unfortunately, we have never launched a spacecraft that was intended to provide artificial gravity. I understand the design is too complicated. |
#5
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In article ,
Richard Alexander wrote: ...In addition, I don't think you could focus a beam at interplanetary distances (without a REALLY big lens). My rough estimate shows me that a 10 meter telescope could focus a beam from Earth to Mars down to less-than a one-meter spot at 400 nm wavelength... I fear you've dropped a decimal point somewhere. Spot size is very approximately distance*wavelength/diameter. Mars's distance varies depending on where it is in its orbit, but let's take a couple of hundred million kilometers as typical. 200e9 * 400e-9 / 10 = 8000. A spot size of 8km is just not practical. A factor of 100 improvement would bring it down within reach of reason, but a 1km mirror is beyond what's reasonably practical in the near future. Eventually, yes. -- MOST launched 30 June; first light, 29 July; 5arcsec | Henry Spencer pointing, 10 Sept; first science, early Oct; all well. | |
#6
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#8
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Gordon D. Pusch wrote:
(dave schneider) writes: (Henry Spencer) wrote: A factor of 100 improvement would bring it down within reach of reason, but a 1km mirror is beyond what's reasonably practical in the near future. Eventually, yes. Is there any indication of how big a bubble could be blown in microgravity to create an Al or Au sphere, that could be sectioned to provide several spherical mirrors (yes, I know, there's another conic section that is better for focussing; ignore the man behind the curtain for the moment) ? For a sufficiently large focal length, you don't even need spherical sections; the individual sections can be optically _flat_, and still not deviate from the ideal figure by more than a fraction of a wavelength. (IIRC, a 10 km focal length is sufficient for this to be true.) The primarily problem then becomes one of _aligning_ the array of mirrors --- not machining. There was a story in Analog science-fiction magazine some time ago about exactly such a project. Subplots abounded, but the major technical problem was the structure's vibrational modes... -george william herbert |
#9
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(George William Herbert) commented:
Gordon D. Pusch wrote: (dave schneider) writes: (Henry Spencer) wrote: A factor of 100 improvement would bring it down within reach of reason, but a 1km mirror is beyond what's reasonably practical in the near future. Eventually, yes. Is there any indication of how big a bubble could be blown in microgravity to create an Al or Au sphere, that could be sectioned to provide several spherical mirrors (yes, I know, there's another conic section that is better for focussing; ignore the man behind the curtain for the moment) ? For a sufficiently large focal length, you don't even need spherical sections; the individual sections can be optically _flat_, and still not deviate from the ideal figure by more than a fraction of a wavelength. (IIRC, a 10 km focal length is sufficient for this to be true.) The primarily problem then becomes one of _aligning_ the array of mirrors --- not machining. There was a story in Analog science-fiction magazine some time ago about exactly such a project. Subplots abounded, but the major technical problem was the structure's vibrational modes... Well, the idea I had about the bubble was that it would a) take care of the aligning of sections and b) reduce or eliminate the need for truss sections. /dps |
#10
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Dave S:
Henry S: A factor of 100 improvement would bring it down within reach of reason, but a 1km mirror is beyond what's reasonably practical in the near future. Eventually, yes. Is there any indication of how big a bubble could be blown in microgravity to create an Al or Au sphere, that could be sectioned to provide several spherical mirrors (yes, I know, there's another conic section that is better for focusing; ignore the man behind the curtain for the moment) ? Surface tension vs expansion rates and cooling issues are the obvious factors; using a chemical rocket for the blowing (and maybe for heating the melt) might give some ability to sustain an elastic temperature, though, by filling the bubble with hot exhaust. Personally I don't see a problem manufacturing a 1 or 2km conic section using an inflatable structure. Accuracy is less a problem for focusing power. A ten-meter spot size seems about right. Using a more accurate semi-ridged mirror to focus down to a 20 cm spot. Rather a nozzle-bell shape with a spherical clear end, much like a flashlight reflector. One-half mill Kapton with a sputtered silver/gold reflector layer and the end with a UV stabilized PET with a selective filter coating under an anti-reflective coating. After the main area is inflated a grid of tubes would be inflated on the mirror section and then the whole mirror section plasma-sprayed with aluminum. Once completed the structure should have the pressure reduced to a minimum to avoid the risk of overpressure. Current Vacuum sputter coating technology limit the width of gores to a two-meter width and length to ~8km. Dupont's large width for Kapton is 54" but 2 meters should be negotiable with a very large order. Fabrication would have to be planet side. -- Anvil* Personally I'd rather see such a structure used as a solar furnace to scrap space junk into useable forms. |
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