In the paper I presented at the Dallas convention two years
ago, I posited a transport vehicle from
Earth to Mars and back, to be based in
low orbit at each end of the voyage.
Some or all of the tankage has to be jettisoned by voyage end, depending upon selected transfer propulsion, but the engines and habitat module are
recovered and reused on subsequent missions.
That reduces long-term costs.
Based from orbit like that,
it is possible to send a single vehicle to multiple sites on Mars in the
single mission, depending upon how many
landers you send, and exactly how you
send them there. That increases
“bang-for-the-buck”. Sending a single
landing vehicle to any given site presents the “standard” risks that we already
well-understand from Apollo. Given
sufficiently powerful propulsion, these
landers can be single stage reusable,
even without refueling while on the surface. Otherwise,
these are two-stage one-shot chemical vehicles, unless you can refuel them on the surface. Anyone
can prove that, by plugging in realistic numbers into the rocket equation.
If you add refueling while on the surface, so as to make single-stage reusable chemical
propulsion feasible, there are two
choices: (1) carry the fuel-making equipment
with you, or (2) send it down separately
to the same site. If you carry it with
you, there are two issues to
address: (1) your lander is necessarily much
bigger and heavier, and (2) the
fuel-making devices must work very fast,
within the time frame of the surface stay, which is limited by the men, for any of a variety of very good reasons. (Long surface stays are not very realistic
for a first mission, due to all the life
support uncertainties.)
Plus, you are betting
lives on the fuel-making gear working correctly, at that particular site, which might be quite different from “typical”
Mars. Although, that last risk can be effectively eliminated
by suitable development testing, which
of course takes calendar time.
If you send it (the fuel-maker) down separately, that opens a whole host of other safety
issues that I have not yet seen discussed very well. The most obvious one is the capability of
actually landing multiple vehicles close together at the same site, not too far out of range of each other. This takes a radar transponder and a vehicle that
is steerable during entry. These are
things we already have (even capsules have been steerable since Gemini), but we have never actually carried out such a
homed-in landing before. That’s another
issue that can be effectively eliminated by suitable development testing, which again takes calendar time.
The other issues involve the achieved range between landed
vehicles. If the return vehicle is too
far from the fuel-maker, how does one
transport the fuel from one to the other,
when there is no fuel transportation infrastructure on Mars? By truck?
By pipeline? By strung
hoses? That last requires a very close
range indeed, between landed vehicles.
The other two require equipment that raises lander vehicle size
considerably; if you do that, you might as well carry the ascent propellant
down with you.
Landing really close together (so that strung hoses are
feasible) brings into play another very serious risk: rocket blast effects. Even a chemical rocket produces a very high
velocity stream whose stagnation temperature is very high, until reduced by mixing with ambient atmosphere gases. These are very destructive plumes, and the forces they impose on impacted
structures are very high (in effect the same size as the thrust force produced
on the vehicle, multiplied by the
fraction of the entire plume that is intercepted by the structure, and factored for effective perpendicularity). You run the risks of puncturing the
propellant tanks on your fuel-maker,
and/or cooking-off the propellants with the heating of the jet blast
washing all over it (that plume spreads widely at low backpressures).
By the way, the
supersonic expansion that reduces static gas temperatures is not “permanent”: as soon as the gas flow shocks down
subsonic, its static temperature is once again very
nearly stagnation, and that’s essentially
the rocket chamber temperature, until reduced by mixing. That’s
what happens as soon as the plume strikes anything solid. The source temperature for heat transfer
across the boundary layer is the recovery temperature, which is only a little lower than
stagnation. This is standard textbook stuff on heat
transfer in very compressible (supersonic) flow.
The other risk with close-range landings is the obvious
collision risk. That can be handled by a
human pilot taking manual control, as it
was on the moon with Apollo, which in turn eliminates the possibility of landing multiple robot vehicles close together at the same site. But for the manned vehicle that maneuvers, you have to budget descent propellant to
handle that contingency. You cannot
trim margins “to the bone” and still do that effectively. Minimalist mission plans never address
things like this.
That’s one big reason why I rarely believe the claims of practicality regarding anybody’s minimalist mission design approaches.
That’s one big reason why I rarely believe the claims of practicality regarding anybody’s minimalist mission design approaches.
What I proposed in my Dallas convention paper was powering
single-stage reusable landers with solid-core nuclear thermal engines
(basically a resurrected NERVA), and
avoiding entirely the “making-return-propellant issue”, by simply carrying it all with you in a
bigger, more capable vehicle. These same nuclear landers could push the
entire landing propellant supply to Mars, separately from the manned ship. That could be another cost savings.
Resurrecting NERVA for this purpose might well be a
faster engineering development time than any of the in-situ propellant technologies. I think NERVA could be resurrected by the
“right team” in 5 years. I’d bet any of the
in-situ propellant things will take longer,
because we have never done them before,
while we did do NERVA before,
back in the 1950-1973 time frame.
Fundamentally, the choice of what
technologies to attempt really all boils down to: “how soon do we really want to go?”
That brings up a very serious caveat: I think the US government goal of “sometime
in the 2030’s” is really code for “never”.
NASA is spending its resources on
a rocket mandated by Congress instead of one we really need, and on a capsule that competes with one
developed commercially that is already further along in its development. They are doing this instead of looking
seriously (meaning substantial funding) at practical and safe transfer habitats
for astronauts, Mars lander
vehicles, or advanced propulsion that
would cut overall program costs. This is
a recipe for failure, not success.
Long development times for the truly-necessary “tinkertoys” mean
this landing will not happen in our lifetimes,
if it is to be done by NASA (or anybody else who does not understand the
consequences of these choices). If we humans
are going to do this any time sooner than “2030’s = never”, it has to be with tinkertoys we already have,
or that we can obtain very quickly (under 5
years), because the final development
checkouts will add 5 more years to that.
That already puts us about 2020 to 2025.
And I think it needs to be done by somebody non-governmental like a
Spacex. Somebody actually motivated to
go, and free-enough of bureaucratic
chains, to go.
Pessimistic, I
know. Sorry, but I’m a practical realist.
GW
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