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A small rover, emerging from a landed module. Goes along the surface
and picks up say 50 kilos of samples. Then it returns to the module, it takes off and comes back to Earth. Or, it could dispense the samples, leave the return craft and stay on Mars doing more experiments. How large would such a platform need to be to escape Martian gravity which is 1/3 that of Earth's? |
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![]() "RichA" wrote in message ... A small rover, emerging from a landed module. Goes along the surface and picks up say 50 kilos of samples. Then it returns to the module, it takes off and comes back to Earth. Or, it could dispense the samples, leave the return craft and stay on Mars doing more experiments. How large would such a platform need to be to escape Martian gravity which is 1/3 that of Earth's? __________________________________________________ __ And return to earth. If robots worked as well as astronauts, its not much harder than what Apollo 11 managed. The escape velocity of Mars is a bit higher than the Moon, but it has an atmosphere which helps on the way down to the surface (at least). The reason we cannot do it with humans is because the flight would be so long we would need to take tons of life support equipment for every stage of the trip - air, water, food, pressure, radiation etc as well as some capability to abort the mission. This makes it impractical. However a robot can happily sit on standby for months or years at a time, so the mission length is irrelevant, and we are not wasting payload on human life support. The problem is that we don't have robots sufficiently reliable or flexible or intelligent to make this happen. Soon we may. |
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On 13/10/2012 08:49, Peter Webb wrote:
"RichA" wrote in message ... A small rover, emerging from a landed module. Goes along the surface and picks up say 50 kilos of samples. Then it returns to the module, it takes off and comes back to Earth. Or, it could dispense the samples, leave the return craft and stay on Mars doing more experiments. How large would such a platform need to be to escape Martian gravity which is 1/3 that of Earth's? __________________________________________________ __ And return to earth. If robots worked as well as astronauts, its not much harder than what Apollo 11 managed. The escape velocity of Mars is a bit higher than the Moon, but it has an atmosphere which helps on the way down to the surface (at least). The reason we cannot do it with Actually ISTR that Martian atmosphere is a damn nuisance. Enough air resistance to burn up space probes on initial entry but not enough to give much useful deceleration with a parachute at lower levels. Mars probes have a pretty bad record for going wrong or AWOL. humans is because the flight would be so long we would need to take tons of life support equipment for every stage of the trip - air, water, food, pressure, radiation etc as well as some capability to abort the mission. This makes it impractical. However a robot can happily sit on standby for months or years at a time, so the mission length is irrelevant, and we are not wasting payload on human life support. The problem is that we don't have robots sufficiently reliable or flexible or intelligent to make this happen. Soon we may. I think we could make the robotic kit now, but the maximum weight we can land on Mars reliably is about what the rover is now or maybe twice that at a push. So your returning probe would have to be pretty small and perhaps carry at most 1kg or less rock samples. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
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