It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
SpaceX has had a pretty good run the last couple of weeks. The main booster from its CRS-3 resupply mission to the ISS returned to Earth and landed softly in the Atlantic Ocean — a world first for space launches. Then it won an injunction against its arch rival, the Boeing/Lockheed United Launch Alliance, which forbade them from using Russian rocket engines. And now, SpaceX has successfully completed a high-altitude (1,000-meter) test flight for its Falcon 9 Reusable rocket — and, of course, there’s an amazing accompanying video, complete with with stampeding cows and beautiful hexacopter-filmed footage of the massive rocket hovering in mid-air.
This test flight, like the other F9R and Grasshopper launches, took place at SpaceX’s McGregor, Texas facility. McGregor is used for early-in-development lower-altitude (up to 3,000 meters) flights. Another F9R test vehicle (“Dev 2″) is being built and will perform high-altitude (up to 91,000 meters, or the edge of outer space) test flights from Spaceport America in New Mexico. Rather than the fixed landing legs seen in early F9R and Grasshopper prototypes, the F9R Dev 2 rocket will probably have retractable legs, just like a real alien spaceship.
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: ngchunter
Well there are already fantastic developments being made in plasma technology, which no one in the space industry seems to be taking any bloody notice of, or thinking about in a large enough and grand enough manner. The real leg work is already done.
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: Ghost147
As impressive as this is, I find the continued use of traditional rocket engines, rather than the development of more versatile energy and propulsion production systems, to be a mark against the entire space flight industry. Frankly I think everyone working on rockets, rather than working on the alternatives is holding the development of better space flight technology back, and should be ashamed of themselves for their narrow mindedness and lack of foresight.
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: ngchunter
Well there are already fantastic developments being made in plasma technology, which no one in the space industry seems to be taking any bloody notice of, or thinking about in a large enough and grand enough manner. The real leg work is already done.
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
originally posted by: TrueBrit
a reply to: ngchunter
Well there are already fantastic developments being made in plasma technology, which no one in the space industry seems to be taking any bloody notice of, or thinking about in a large enough and grand enough manner. The real leg work is already done.
Would a plasma engine give you a powerful enough thrust (in pounds) necessary to get off of the ground in the first place?
originally posted by: DietJoke
S&F!
This is remarkable technology, given that it is all chemical rocketry epic fail!
@ Everybody discussing what else could be used ... NUCLEAR PROPULSION!
But the main unsolved problem for a launch from the surface of the Earth was thought to be nuclear fallout. Any explosions within the magnetosphere would carry fissionables back to earth unless the spaceship were launched from a polar region such as a barge in the higher regions of the Arctic, with the initial launching explosion to be a large mass of conventional high explosive only to significantly reduce fallout; subsequent detonations would be in the air and therefore much cleaner. Antarctica is not viable, as this would require enormous legal changes as the continent is presently an international wildlife preserve.
Freeman Dyson, group leader on the project, estimated back in the 1960s that with conventional nuclear weapons (a large fraction of yield from fission), each launch would cause statistically on average between 0.1 and 1 fatal cancers from the fallout. That estimate is based on no threshold model assumptions, a method often used in estimates of statistical deaths from other major industrial activities, such as how modern-day U.S. regulatory agencies frequently implement regulations on more conventional pollution if one life or more is predicted saved per $6 million to $8 million of economic costs incurred. Each few million dollars of efficiency indirectly gained or lost in the world economy may statistically average lives saved or lost, in terms of opportunity gains versus costs. Indirect effects could matter for whether the overall influence of an Orion-based space program on future human global mortality would be a net increase or a net decrease, including if change in launch costs and capabilities affected space exploration, space colonization, the odds of long-term human species survival, space-based solar power, or other hypotheticals.
Danger to human life was not a reason given for shelving the project – those included lack of mission requirement (no-one in the US Government could think of any reason to put thousands of tons of payload into orbit), the decision to focus on rockets (for the Moon mission) and, ultimately, the signing of the Partial Test Ban Treaty in 1963. The danger to electronic systems on the ground (from electromagnetic pulse) was not considered to be significant from the sub-kiloton blasts proposed since solid-state integrated circuits were not in general use at the time.
originally posted by: DietJoke
a reply to: JadeStar
FYI ... Project Orion (nuclear propulsion)
But the main unsolved problem for a launch from the surface of the Earth was thought to be nuclear fallout. Any explosions within the magnetosphere would carry fissionables back to earth unless the spaceship were launched from a polar region such as a barge in the higher regions of the Arctic, with the initial launching explosion to be a large mass of conventional high explosive only to significantly reduce fallout; subsequent detonations would be in the air and therefore much cleaner. Antarctica is not viable, as this would require enormous legal changes as the continent is presently an international wildlife preserve.
Freeman Dyson, group leader on the project, estimated back in the 1960s that with conventional nuclear weapons (a large fraction of yield from fission), each launch would cause statistically on average between 0.1 and 1 fatal cancers from the fallout. That estimate is based on no threshold model assumptions, a method often used in estimates of statistical deaths from other major industrial activities, such as how modern-day U.S. regulatory agencies frequently implement regulations on more conventional pollution if one life or more is predicted saved per $6 million to $8 million of economic costs incurred. Each few million dollars of efficiency indirectly gained or lost in the world economy may statistically average lives saved or lost, in terms of opportunity gains versus costs. Indirect effects could matter for whether the overall influence of an Orion-based space program on future human global mortality would be a net increase or a net decrease, including if change in launch costs and capabilities affected space exploration, space colonization, the odds of long-term human species survival, space-based solar power, or other hypotheticals.
Danger to human life was not a reason given for shelving the project – those included lack of mission requirement (no-one in the US Government could think of any reason to put thousands of tons of payload into orbit), the decision to focus on rockets (for the Moon mission) and, ultimately, the signing of the Partial Test Ban Treaty in 1963. The danger to electronic systems on the ground (from electromagnetic pulse) was not considered to be significant from the sub-kiloton blasts proposed since solid-state integrated circuits were not in general use at the time.
And Fukushima is already a radioactive hell hole ... simply make it the launch site and pay the Japanese rental for the new space port.
The benefits are the following ...
The ability to launch 4000 metric tons of space craft carrying 150 crew and 500+ metric tons of cargo to Saturn and back within two years.
Now if you can show me one chemical rocket that can compete with that, then I would love to see it!
Missions that were designed for an Orion vehicle in the original project included single stage (i.e., directly from Earth's surface) to Mars and back, and a trip to one of the moons of Saturn.
During take-off, there were concerns of danger from fluidic shrapnel being reflected from the ground. One proposed solution was to use a flat plate of conventional explosives spread over the pusher plate, and detonate this to lift the ship from the ground before going nuclear. This would lift the ship far enough into the air that the first focused nuclear blast would not create debris capable of harming the ship.
It only requires about 2% of the propellant be reserved for the reentry burn and landing. It only slightly reduces the amount of payload the Falcon 9 can deliver to orbit. But it has the added benefit of returning the first stage for reuse, thus greatly reducing costs. In other words, it's well worth the propellant cost.
originally posted by: coastlinekid
The downside of this spaceX tech is that the rocket has to carry the fuel for both launch and re-entry and landing on board which makes the craft much heavier than a craft that can glide back to earth... This is one of the reasons the McDonnell Douglas similar rocket tech was cancelled.