LionElJonson wrote:
Really? Hmm. If that's the case, then my first impression of "It might be cheaper to just subcontract the production of nuclear fuel to a subcontractor and/or just build a breeder reactor than to buy the stuff on the open market" might well be the case.
That's like saying it might be cheaper to just build a 200,000 foot mountain as the launch pad. Sure maybe it would be, but you’ll never get approval to build what you need. Breeders make plutonium 239 BTW, not HEU. Extracting Pu-239 from the spent nuclear fuel requires its own world of highly specialized facilities, and a damn lot of reactor capacity. It also produces large quantities of low-mid level nuclear waste, and creates criticality and well as spill accident risks your company is now liable for. Do you realize how many decades it will take to license sites to do any of this work, even if you have the money and political support required to even try?
That said, I might well be able to convince Russia and the US to it, since India's already got nuclear weapons, and using them as NPP fuel is just as good as any way to dispose of the stuff peacefully.
No you won't. Russia won't give you the time of day and the US will send you a short form letter saying no. Blowing HEU fallout in the air with hundreds of atomic blasts is as good as blending the stuff down so it can never be used for nuclear arms.... do you realize how dumb that is to say?
Because I would do the research before making a serious proposal. Also, because I'm not just beating my head against the wall, here; I'm learning valuable stuff from this argument, and I thank you for that.
Happy to help, but you are delusional to think you have any chance. Don't waste your time. People far smarter then you or I who actually are nuclear and rocket engineers have tried serious proposals for Orion. They got nowhere in an era when the atom was still man's best friend. Today you face not only colossal political challenges which go to the core of international relations today, but also competition from conventional rockets which work way better then those of the 1960s.
You also simply don't have a payload. No matter how well you’re Orion worked on paper, removing all doubts for the sake of conversation, what are you going to orbit which needs a 6,000 ton Orion? Hundreds of serious proposals and extensive studies exist for large space boosters such as the Nova series I linked too. They don't get built because normal satellite orbiting missions do not require that kind of performance. If you don't have a large object to justify the booster performance, the booster never gets built, no matter how it works. No one is going to give you billions of dollars just for the costs of detailed design, let alone the additional billions each for prototype, building the launch pad, building the nuclear infrastructure or actually building the first Orion, unless you have a viable business plan. You don’t just build something like that and wait for customers to show up. Not unless you happen to have your own private 40 billion dollar fortune you feel like gambling with anyway.
An Orion could have a somewhat low cost per pound to orbit, but it orbits a damn lot of pounds at once which means it will still be hideously expensive per launch. Unless you use up every single pound, the cost per pound used goes up. What's more placing multiple spacecraft on one booster the penalty for failure rises sharply, and you have non trivial limitations on how you can deploy those spacecraft into different orbits. An Orion launched into a polar orbit for example will never be able to unload a payload into GEO. So you can’t just accept satellites from any random customer and pack them all into one launch.
This isn't even touching on the fact that the EMP from launching an Orion would devastate everything in orbit and almost certainly lead to a US military strike on the Orion before it can launch. This issue I am sure you are unaware of, because if you knew about it you would never consider Orion credible in the modern day.
Hmm. That might be a possible result of the aviation industry's caution; it's a bureaucratic nightmare trying to get anything that hasn't been extensively tested approved.
Yes it is, because risk has to be managed. You are liable for the Orion craft veering off course and crashing into a city remember. You are also liable for it blowing up on the launch pad and burning up several tons of highly toxic HEU. How many launch failures do you think investors will tolerate? How long will they bankroll R&D on unproven technology? What about the host government?
I suppose I could probably save money there by making sure my engineers design the thing out of mostly pre-approved components, though.
You could save some money doing that sure, guidance computers for example could be based directly on existing models. But Orion demands a lot of very unique hardware, and software which is own challenge. The pusher plate for example has to be sprayed in oil to prevent ablation.... but liquid does not spray in a fine mist in a near vacuum. It will come out as large drops. The fine mist may not even be possible; you will need prototypes in vacuum testing chambers to find out. If it can work, then you have to find a way to make it work while the piping is being subject to atomic weapons effects.
That is the kind of thing you would have to test extensively and it might never work. Someone has to think highly enough of your proposal that they are willing to risk money to find out. That in turn will depend heavily on your personal experience, knowledge and reputation. You’ve got nothing in any of those categories, and let me tell you, if you don’t have connections in life by now; the odds overwhelmingly say you never will.
I love Orion too, as a concept. It is very cool. It is not remotely practical for a launch from the earths surface. It would be more viable if it was launched from the dark side of the moon towards Alpha Centauri. It is obvious that you do not understand what is involved in this even in basic terms. You are failing at even convincing an amateur web forum that you know what you are talking about. What hope do you think you have in real life? The fact that you think one semester is sufficient study... I don't think I can convey how hopeless your self declared position is.
I don't need to; only the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty bans the civilian use of nuclear detonations. It's also why we aren't building prototypes; the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty bans them.
The hell? First of all the comprehensive test ban treaty has not entered into binding force; it is irrelevant at the moment, which is the only good news you’ve gotten today. The issue is the Limited Test Band Treaty alone, but it says nothing about allowing prototypes or civilian launches, in fact it says the complete opposite that even non weapons tests are banned.
The relevant text is as follows
1. Each of the Parties to this Treaty undertakes to prohibit, to prevent, and not to carry out any nuclear weapon test explosion, or any other nuclear explosion, at any place under its jurisdiction or control:
(a) in the atmosphere; beyond its limits, including outer space; or under water, including territorial waters or high seas; or
(b) in any other environment if such explosion causes radioactive debris to be present outside the territorial limits of the State under whose jurisdiction or control such explosion is conducted. It is understood in this connection that the provisions of this subparagraph are without prejudice to the conclusion of a Treaty resulting in the permanent banning of all nuclear test explosions, including all such explosions underground, the conclusion of which, as the Parties have stated in the Preamble to this Treaty, they seek to achieve.
2. Each of the Parties to this Treaty undertakes furthermore to refrain from causing, encouraging, or in any way participating in, the carrying out of any nuclear weapon test explosion, or any other nuclear explosion, anywhere which would take place in any of the environments described, or have the effect referred to, in paragraph 1 of this Article.
An Orion launch is in violation of all of this. Only contained underground nuclear initiations are legal under the Limited Test Ban Treaty. No exemptions for civilian use. The very specific purpose of this treaty was to prevent continued buildup of nuclear fallout in the atmosphere.
Amendments can be proposed to the treaty, and you would require one. That is why I asked what the political strategy is to make that happen, which will require 1/3rd of signing members of the treaty to agree
just to be allowed to discuss an amendment. To pass an amendment
all original members must agree along with a majority of all signatories. That means the US and Russia, and then about 50 other countries must agree to your Indian Orion launch.
You need this approval BEFORE you start any serious work on an Orion craft, because no one is going to give you any damn money to do any work unless they know for a fact it will be possible to launch the damn ship. No national government is simply going to ignore the treaty and become subject to sanctions, which will surely include a ban on importing fissile material or feedstock, just to facilitate your wet dream project.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956