Bigger yet. World government. A real one.someone_else wrote:maybe I was not clear. Are they run with a profit or with a loss? By a private company or by the US/USSR government?
someone_else wrote:Just below what you quoted I said:
-you use atmosphere as propellant
-the delta-v needed to get anywhere in a speed worth using Boom-Boom-Orion is 3-4 times that of reaching orbit.
Since delta-v to reach orbit is somewhere around 10-11 km/s and 3-4 times that is 30-40 km/s... Which is relatively crappy for a true high-speed transit, but should bring you to Mars in 3 months.
Anyway, you need somewhere like 2400-3200 bombs for a one-way trip to inner system destinations (Mars, venus, mercury, asteroid belt), or say 4800 bombs to go to Jupiter with something like 8 months of coasting. And you cannot do much better than that, my spreadsheet tells me you'd have a payload below 0 kg already.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_pulse_propulsionWikipedia article about the Orion study wrote:The reference design was to be constructed of steel using submarine-style construction with a crew of more than 200 and a vehicle takeoff weight of several thousand tons. This low-tech single-stage reference design would reach Mars and back in four weeks from the Earth's surface (compared to 12 months for NASA's current chemically-powered reference mission). The same craft could visit Saturn's moons in a seven-month mission (compared to chemically-powered missions of about nine years).
http://hem.bredband.net/ulfn/checklists ... rbiter.htm
http://www.oriondrive.com/
Something's not right here.
Explain what "weird shit" is pulled out in these studies.someone_else wrote:That is with the relatively realistic Orion designs, before they pull really weird shit out of nowhere.
Is it like the system suggested by the guy here?someone_else wrote:The kinetic impactors I talked of above can keep accelerating your ass for as long as you want them to (you can pull brachistochrones! Yay!), with a Ve which is a little less than double that of an Orion at optimal conditions, which means they basically beat the crap out of Orion performance-wise for a fraction of the cost (especially if you can make them with ISRU and just ship the electronics from Earth). The only difference is that you have to book the flight a year or so of time ahead of the departure, not even Orions can dramatically change their course.
http://www.bautforum.com/showthread.php ... e-NEA-ISRU
I have no desire to fill my universe with weaponized space. Earth is united, humans live in peace and the next war is thousands of years away. But in any case the impactor system would rely on external control of the impactor swarm, which is problematic if we'd face interference of some sort. On the other hand, the Orion controls its own propulsion.someone_else wrote:Also, the swarm of kinetic impactors can have military uses as well, since it can basically sweep away any orbital asset, and any asset on the ground not protected by an atmosphere. Also do a good job at intercepting whatever wants to hit the vessel that is using them as propulsion.
Takes a damn while to get them to the target, but it's something that can be used as space-equivalent of ICBMs for space assets that don't move much faster either.
Good ideas, thanks.someone_else wrote:To solve the radioactives problem I'd either start fucking with thorium (it's relatively abundant in the solar system and on Earth, you can use it to breed U233 which can be used to make nukes or fissioned to produce power in a reactor, not so easy as it sounds but doable) or go to fully-fledged fusion bombs.
Would it allow for faster transit between planets in the Solar system?someone_else wrote:If magnetically-confined fusion (which is a major pain in the ass) is a reality, why not using that to build a fusion torch instead of Orion?
Yeah, I didn't mean to say that we're materially in a worse position than in the 1960. Computing advances, material science and so on and so forth have actually improved our potential. Our real abilities hinge on the goals and targets of space exploration programs and the methods used thereby, however.HMS wrote:In 1890 no one knew how to build a rocket that would take a man into space. We can say that it was beyond their capability. No amount of time, with their fixed 1890 scientific knowledge and industrial base, would fix this. In 1960, it was done. In 2010, we are in at worst the same position we were when Saturn V program started. In fact we are in a better position, because we have in addition all the technical knowledge and experience from the Saturn V program, and also subsequent scientific, technological and industrial advances. It therefore would take us less time, be cheaper, better, or all of those. That is what is generally considered to be meant by progress.
I saw a documentary on ITER. Even though the fusion isn't completely clean, there are few if any fundamental challenges to operation. Removing the contaminated plates from inside the reactor will be done by robots much like we handle nuclear waste now. Yup, not 100% clean, but you don't get a chance of it going Fukushima, which is in my view a huge improvement. The ITER pessimism stems from the early 2000s and the 1990s, right now I'm not sure someone would seriously argue the thing wouldn't run. It might be a little tricky and there are engineering challenges, but not theoretical physics ones.Simon_Jester wrote:The guys who work in the field are reasonably optimistic now- they have the physics nailed down well enough to make the reactor work, and the engineering is just expensive, now that the computer technology is up to making it all designable.