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Henry Spencer wrote:
In article , Christopher wrote: (The archetypal example of big rocket with tiny payload because of high delta-V requirement was the original Pluto Fast Flyby proposal... For a Pluto Fast Flyby wouldn't it be more feasable to have a small nuclear thermal rocket sent on its way from LEO... There was no possibility of such a thing being available -- and thus feasible in any practical sense -- for the mid-90s launch that PFF wanted. The Titan IV plus upper stages was perfectly feasible, essentially off the shelf... just horribly expensive, at a time when spending the better part of a billion on one planetary mission simply wasn't in the cards. I was on the PFF mission team, as a liaison with DOE/LLNL (because the PFF group wanted to use Clementine-type sensors and guidance). No one really liked the multiple stages, but the only alternative seemed to be a series of planetary flyby maneuvers, which, because of the requirements on the position of Jupiter, couldn't be done until several years after the planned launch of PFF. I proposed to the team that they consider a very modest "quick and dirty" solar thermal stage -- roughly 10 kW thermal power, 800 s Isp, as I recall -- as an alternative to the stacked solids. Such a stage would normally be pretty useless, but for this particular mission, it made sense. In particular, given the huge Titan shroud, there was plenty of room for a rigid 3+ meter mirror as a solar collector, and for a large LH2 tank. Also, the delta-V requirements were so high that even given the inefficiency of a several week long Solar-thermal burn compared to a short deep-in-Earth's-gravity-well solid motor burn, the Solar-thermal stage was a lot lighter. Hoppy Price, the system engineer, liked the idea and wanted to pursue it, at least a little, but it was too unproven for the rest of the team (and especially the higher-up JPL management) so it never went anywhere. -- Jordin Kare "Point and click" means you're out of ammo. |
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