http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-23349496
quite a good article might wanna grab the headphones and a sandwich first
quite a good article might wanna grab the headphones and a sandwich first
a nuclear thermal rocket still requires a working fluid to provide the thrust (usually liquid hydrogen) so they would still need to mine water for fuel.@Listeri69
That was really good. Well put together too.
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Just looking at the return journey part of the video, I think that there maybe an easier solution.....
The video states that mining water to convert into rocket fuel would be needed to launch the return vehicle off the surface. This water would have to be mined, processed and stored over quite some time - at least a couple of years before the mission even begins.
Well why go to all that trouble when you can drop a nuclear thermal rocket on the surface? The nuclear reaction should generate enough thrust to launch the return vehicle back into space. This technology has been around since the 1940's as well.
I can't see why this method hasn't been considered. Unless I am missing something.
a nuclear thermal rocket still requires a working fluid to provide the thrust (usually liquid hydrogen) so they would still need to mine water for fuel.
a nuclear thermal rocket still requires a working fluid to provide the thrust (usually liquid hydrogen) so they would still need to mine water for fuel.
Yes, but they wouldn't need as much so it could be simply transported to the planets surface before hand.
Or another possible solution is to send SRB's (Solid Rocket Boosters) down to the surface. The point I am making is that I think there are other solutions to mining water, which would take a very long time to process into hydrogen.
converting water to hydrogen is simple and takes no time at all, you can even get hydrogen kits for your car that use distilled water to produce hydrogen that's fed through the air intake of the engine to give a performance boost and lower MPG.
it would be much harder (and a lot more expensive) to transport SRB's big enough to do the job as you would first have to lift them from Earth's gravity well, transport them to Mars and then find a way to land them safely on the surface.
by building a gas station on Mars you eliminate the need to expend a massive amount of resources to transport fuel for both legs of the journey and in doing so reduce the size of the spacecraft you need by a factor of more than 50%
water would be required in large amounts to make a manned mission viable as each person would require 2 - 3 litres drinking water every day for a period of several years.
1000+ litres per person before you even consider how much would be required for personal hygiene and at 1KG per litre that would add a lot of weight.
a big difference in size between the two, the Mars rover is 899 kilograms while each SRB used by the space shuttle is 590,000 kg at launch, even considering that martian gravity is 62% that of earth so the boosters would be that much smaller that's a lot to transport.On earth Yes, trying doing it on Mars where the temperature at best is zero degrees.
Like they do with the Mars Rovers?
Have you any idea how long that process will take? You are talking about decades of R&D and then there is the time it takes to collect the Hydrogen needed. If you think that transporting SRB's to Mars would be difficult, How on Earth can you expect to get a hydrogen garage there with all the processing and storage equipment?
and would be required anyway but it only goes so far and doesn't have the added benefit of producing oxygen as the electrolysis of water does.Recycling is an option here.
Just to add, Although I agree that mining the water is essential for the long term, I don't think it is an option for the first few missions. Too many things can go wrong.
Think he might just be suggesting only a nuclear warhead. Detonate the warhead for thrust; quite an acceleration I should think![]()
a big difference in size between the two, the Mars rover is 899 kilograms while each SRB used by the space shuttle is 590,000 kg at launch, even considering that martian gravity is 62% that of earth so the boosters would be that much smaller that's a lot to transport.
besides that when i said making hydrogen was simple i meant it, you can do it at home, all a hydrogen garage would consist of could be fit into the average backpack
it's precisely because too many things can go wrong that water/hydrogen extraction on Mars would be needed before we could send a manned mission, imagine if on the way there the ship carrying the first humans to mars was hit with a micrometeorite and lost some of it's oxygen or water supply - without a gas station to replenish those life essential consumables the occupants would be long dead before they could either be resupplied or return to earth.