Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
Originally posted by: Syringer
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
Originally posted by: waggy
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the "guest" on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
Originally posted by: BigJ
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
Originally posted by: dlock13
Chernobyl all over again. :|
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
Originally posted by: silverpig
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
Originally posted by: potato28
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
Originally posted by: Gibsons
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. <a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageAhh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs of having a liquid ocean beneath its cracked, largely crater-free surface.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Syringer[/b][/i]
Unless they can somehow be 100% sure that it'll turn out 100% perfect, which is impossible, the risks are not worth it. While a normal space shuttle explosion is terrible enough, a nuclear explosion in the sky probably is a little worse..[/quote]
They did high atmosphere nuclear tests in the mid 20th century. A fission-powered spacecraft could no more explode in a mushroom cloud than a nuclear power plant could. And FYI, nuclear power plants simply cannot do this. There isn't enough fissile material present in the core to reach critical mass. Either that, or it's not arranged in a fashion that allows a single critical mass to form.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]waggy[/b][/i]
sure im for it.
i would think the only danger would be getting it to space in the first place. other then that it would be fine.
oh and the ---guest--- on the vehicle might have some problems. but as for it explodeing in space? that really does not worry me.[/quote]
We've got other problems, in the form of cosmic radiation and solar radiation. Stuff like that could kill anyone headed to Mars. Solve those problems, and a little local uranium-generated radiation shouldn't be a problem.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]BigJ[/b][/i]
I just don't see how they could safely get it into orbit 100% of the time. Even if the reactor is self contained and doesn't go up in a blast (which would be a hell of a chore itself), I'd imagine you'd have anywhere from a several hundred lb chunk to a several ton chunk, possibly even heavier (again, I have no idea how big of a reactor they would need for a shuttle, how they would implement the containment, or any other variables that we would need to take into account), falling to the earth. If this occurred on a remote island in the pacific, that wouldn't be that much of a problem, but aren't all shuttle launches out of FL?[/quote]
As I understand it, the RTG's used now are encased in ceramic, and are able to survive re-entry and impact.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]dlock13[/b][/i]
Chernobyl all over again. <img src=---i/expressions/face-icon-small-mad.gif--- border=---0--->[/quote]
Nope. Chernobyl happened because of many operator screw ups and poor maintenance.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]silverpig[/b][/i]
There are plenty of nuclear powered spacecraft which carry plutonium as a fuel source. They work great.
Nuclear propelled though? How would you suggest they work? The only nuclear propulsion mechanism I've heard about is the crazy one where you drop a bomb behind your ship and explode it.[/quote]
I think they might use the nuclear energy to drive a powerful ion engine and very powerful science instruments. Instead of relying on heat generated by a small amount of plutonium, with only a few hundred watts available, a fission reactor could provide many kilowatts. Cassini, which has 3 RTGs (which BTW did not crash into Earth and kill anyone), that give the spacecraft a total of about 700 watts.
With many kilowatts available, very powerful instruments could be used, including high intensity radar to scan deep below the surface, as well as a high bandwidth antenna to send back the huge amounts of data collected.
The project you refer to, I believe that was the Orion Project. Not my idea of a good one.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]potato28[/b][/i]
I'd be all for it, but they'd need to test and test and test... And the 6 feet of concrete would be good, but 1 foot of water would do better. And wouldn't the fuel(uranium?) make the ship heavier? Also the lift-off rockets would still need to be of the conventional type as we don't want a nuclear launch pad that kills the astronauts upon stepping into the area. A better idea would be a space elevator, then have a launch pad on the ISS.[/quote]
Water is still very heavy. One of the ways of shielding against interplanetary radiation is with a spherical shell of water. But it'd be so heavy that 1) launching it would be insanely expensive, and 2) Propelling it would be nearly impossible.
Uranium - I don't think we'd be talking about a lot of the stuff. And to reference Cassini again, look at its launch stats:
Launch mass: 5,574 kilograms
That's 2,442 kilograms of spacecraft and 3,132 kilograms (6,905 pounds) fuel.
The critical mass of low-grade uranium is as much as 600kg. And look at how much energy you can get out of that. Now use high grade uranium (less than 50kg required for critical mass), keep it separated so it can never form a ball of critical mass, or simply use much less than that, and slowly release that energy. That's a huge amount of energy to power an ion engine, which uses comparatively little xenon, to accelerate a probe to very high speeds, and still have plenty of power to use for incredible amounts of scientific exploration.
[quote]
[i]Originally posted by: [b]Gibsons[/b][/i]
I'm in favor of using nuclear reactors in space when it's cost-efficient and/or necessary, but I'm generally against a manned Mars mission at this time.[/quote]
Same here. My usual arguments against it:
- Humans need food. Robots don't mind being idle for long periods of time, without using any energy.
- Humans need space. Robots can be folded up in a tiny volume with no extra room. [L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh,[L=pportunity_Lander_Petals_PIA04848.jpg--->Example]http://en.wikipedia.org/
iki/Image[IMG]Ahh, the Prometheus Project, rest in peace.
It could have sent powerful Flagship class missions to Jupiter. I would have loved to see a special mission to look at Europa. It's got plenty of signs o