Bounding Analysis for
Lunar Lander Designs
GWJ 3-18-17 completed 3-18-17
The scenario here is a lander delivered “neat” to lunar
orbit as an unmanned item. A crew will
arrive separately to rendezvous with it in lunar orbit. The plane of that orbit is presumed to be
very close to the ecliptic. Orbital
direction is retrograde, in accordance
with the figure-eight patched-conic trajectory used during Apollo. The delta-vee to land one-way is 1.68
km/s. For design purposes, a few percent higher is used to provide a
little margin: 1.75 km/s.
The lander is delivered “neat” to lunar orbit, meaning the rocket that takes it to the moon
must do the “burn” to put it into lunar orbit.
The total rocket design delta-vee from the surface of the Earth to do
that is at most 12.4 km/s, when the
first 8 km/s to Earth orbit is factored for drag and gravity losses by
1.05. This is very close to the surface
launch for a more-or-less worst-case slow trajectory to Mars, which is about 12.1 km/s, factored the same way. That way, the tonnage sendable onto a Mars transfer
trajectory is almost the same as what can be delivered into lunar orbit, for our purposes here.
Descent Design
Requirements
Spacex lists on its website that its Falcon-Heavy can send
13.6 metric tons to Mars, flown
fully-expendably, for about $90 M launch
price. This heavy-lift booster hasn’t
yet flown, but it should fly this year
(2017). Reducing that payload slightly
for the slightly-higher delta-vee to lunar orbit, call that a max payload to lunar orbit of an
even 13 metric tons.
For the descent stage,
ready to fire in lunar orbit, we
are looking at an ignition mass of 13,000 kg maximum, and a required design delta-vee of 1.75
km/s. Propellants should be
storable, since days to weeks, even months,
in space (or on the moon) are contemplated. With nozzles designed for vacuum, and assuming NTO-MMH propellants, a delivered Isp = 335 sec is quite realistic. Engine thrust/weight ratio of 100
Newtons-of-thrust per Newton of engine Earth weight seems feasible.
Thrust to ignition Earth weight ratio should
just barely exceed lunar gravity’s pull,
so that plenty of thrust margin is available at burnout weight: 0.2 seems “reasonable”. We’d like the vehicle acceleration at burnout
to be less than 1 gee, preferably under
0.5 gee, to keep the ride from being too
rough, and to limit throttleability
requirements to feasible values.
The propellant tanks will need a sun-reflective surface and
some insulation, plus electric in-tank
heaters, on a single-hull tank. That means the descent stage propellant
tankage will not be quite as lightweight as that of an expendable booster. Just considering the tankage alone, a 95-5 split of propellant to tank masses
seems reasonable to assume (Wp/Wt = 95/5 = 19).
The rest of the stage structure must bear the thrusted
flight maneuvering loads carrying as large a payload as possible, plus incorporate a set of broad-span landing
legs, and some means of unloading large
items (ramps, crane, etc.).
An inert structural fraction for the stage near 15% should cover all of
this. That fraction does not include
tank inerts or engine hardware. Those
get figured separately, and then added
to determine an overall stage inert mass fraction.
The objective here is to determine max payload mass within
that ignition mass limitation. That
payload can be either (1) cargo delivered one-way, or (2) an ascent vehicle carrying minimum
crew and cargo weight. They mass the
same, though.
Sizing a “Clean-Sheet”
Bound on the Descent Stage
Exhaust velocity is rather accurately estimated as Vex, km/s
= 9.8067*(Isp, sec)/1000. That and the
design delta-vee value combine to determine stage mass ratio MR =
exp(dV/Vex). The required propellant
fraction (of ignition mass) is Wp/Wig = 1 – 1/MR. The corresponding fraction for tankage inerts
is Wt/Wig = (Wp/Wig)/(Wp/Wt). The
corresponding engine inert fraction of ignition mass is We/Wig = (T/Wig)/(T/We). The rest of the stage structural and
equipment inerts is represented by the 15% figure. These total together for the overall stage
inert fraction.
Payload fraction of ignition mass is just 1 minus the
propellant fraction and minus the sum total inert fraction. Once you specify an absolute payload
mass, that determines ignition
mass, from which all the component
masses are determined by their fractions.
That finalizes the weight statement.
For this bounding exercise based on Falcon-Heavy delivery, those results are in Figure 1.
Figure 1 – Limits for Descent Stage, One-Way,
Falcon-Heavy Delivery to Lunar Orbit
Payload is 5.372 metric tons. This could be all cargo, or it could represent a crewed ascent
stage. If cargo, that’s $90M/5.372 metric tons = $16.8M per
metric ton delivered to the surface of the moon. Actually,
you design to a slightly-smaller payload mass, because of all the uncertainties. There is always the unexpected outcome, when sizing vehicles like this “from
scratch”. The weight margins don’t have
to be all that large, because I already
put that into the design delta-vee figures.
Ascent Design
Requirements
The same propellant and tankage choices are presumed. The same engine T/We is assumed. A slightly-higher T/Wig = 0.3 is assumed, to accelerate “smartly upward” against lunar
gravity. Stage inert fractions can be lower
since no unload equipment or landing legs are needed. However,
these inerts are likely higher than a typical booster rocket (5%) because
of the protective cabin surrounding the crew,
the docking hatch, and the instruments
and controls they must use. I simply assumed
10%.
This ascent stage must ascend to lunar orbit (requiring 1.68
km/s), and also maneuver to rendezvous
with the crew return craft left in lunar orbit.
It therefore needs more design delta-vee than the descent stage. Call it 2.0 km/s, for a kitty of 0.3 km/s to cover maneuvering
and the unexpected.
Its maximum ignition mass cannot exceed the descent stage
payload capability of 5372 kg. Prudence
dictates very slightly less. Call it
5360 kg for design-bounding purposes.
Sizing a Clean-Sheet
Ascent Design to Fit the Descent Stage
Figure 2 – Limits for Ascent Stage, One-Way,
To Fit Descent Stage That Falcon-Heavy Can Deliver
For the sake of argument,
use 80 kg per person body weight,
and 120 kg for a surface EVA-capable pressure suit. That’s 200 kg per person. Set food,
water, and breathing oxygen
supplies to 100 kg to cover an unexpectedly-long rendezvous interval of several
days. That’s 300 kg allotted per
person. There’s “room” for 7 such masses
in the payload.
If this were 6 crew,
there’s room for around 300 kg of samples or return cargo. If the crew is 5, there’s room for about 600 kg of samples or
return cargo, and so forth. But the point is, there’s room for a much larger crew than
Apollo had. That’s partly the difference
in technologically-achievable storable propellant performance, and in structural technologies, since the 1960’s. The rest is landing without unknown obstacles
in your path, which is what happened on
Apollo 11, nearly depleting its
propellant.
How This Can Be Used
The one-way cargo-only variant can be used at $90M a shot to
deliver 5.36 metric tons of cargo to the moon ($16.8 M/delivered metric ton). Several could be sent to the same site. Some of these could be the modules from which
some sort of surface habitat could be assembled. The rest could be the supplies, equipment,
and surface rover vehicles needed to operate that base.
The manned lander conforms to the same 5.36 metric ton
weight limit. If crew were 3, then 1200 kg of surface supplies could go
down with them. If crew were 2, then 1500 kg of cargo could ride down. Reducing the ascent load just increases the
rendezvous maneuver capability upon returning to lunar orbit, a very beneficial safety factor.
Say, we sent 9 of
these to the moon: 6 cargo-only landers
and 3 landers with manned ascent stages,
each with a crew of 2 and 1500 kg of cargo on board. That gives us three ascent vehicles on the
lunar surface ready to use, when the
entire crew really only needs one to return.
Added safety, that is.
That’s a total of 32.16 tons delivered with the cargo
landers, and 4.5 more tons sent down
with the manned landers, for a total crew
of 6. Assume simply for the sake of
argument that the surface habitat requires 20 tons. We need to reserve 0.6 tons of supplies for
the crew to ascend. Assume two rovers, each 1 ton.
Assume one electric backhoe-like device, at 2 tons.
36.66 tons total delivered cargo, less 20 ton habitat, 4 tons for vehicles, and 0.6 tons for ascent supplies, leaves 12.06 tons allocatable for surface stay
supplies and other equipment items. At a
nominally-assumed 10 kg life support per person per day for 3 months, then about half that 12 tons is something
other than life support supplies. Also nominally, 3 months of life support supplies for a crew
of 6 is pretty close to a lander’s deliverable payload at 5400 kg. I tried to overestimate this requirement.
Looks to me like there is very good potential for
establishing a fairly substantial lunar experiment station, temporarily occupied for a considerable time
(at least 3 months). This requires 9
Falcon-Heavy fully-expendable launches for the landers, plus one more to send the crew in a crew
Dragon (with its trunk modified to carry propellant, something not addressed here), for $900 M in launch costs. If launch costs were 20% of the program that
develops these vehicles and the surface equipment, total program cost to put a small base
temporarily on the moon would be in the ballpark of $4.5 B.
Launching another cargo lander every 3 months or thereabouts
brings the supplies to keep that base permanently occupied at crew size 6. Maybe switch out crews yearly, by adding a crewed Dragon to lunar orbit
along with a fresh manned lander to take them down to the surface. That’s a total of 6 Falcon-Heavy launches per
year to maintain a continuous presence at the base. That’s $540M per year to maintain the base
after it is built, plus the costs of keeping
the necessary vehicles and equipment in production. Development is complete, so call launch costs ~50% of continuing
program costs.
About $4.5 B to establish a 3-month-capable, 6-man base on the moon, and about $1B/year to keep it continuously
manned and operating is just not very expensive as space ventures go! This analysis is based on the use of a
commercial heavy lift rocket that is far less expensive to use than NASA’s
SLS, and which will also be far more
available for routine use multiple times per year, than NASA’s SLS ever can.
Blue Origin is also planning to get into this kind of lunar
capability with its New Glenn rocket.
Between them and Spacex, putting
a base on the moon looks to be quite feasible and quite affordable. This could provide the bootstrap start needed
to begin doing something useful, or for
profit, on the moon.
Final Remarks
This kind of experiment station allows evaluation of
low-gravity effects upon health versus the zero-gravity effects that we are
familiar with in Earth orbit. It allows
a place to experiment with increasingly-capable recycling life support
systems. It allows a place to experiment
with meteoroid and radiation protection by regolith cover. It allows a place to experiment with ways and
means to overcome contamination and wear issues with very-fine-but-sharp-edged
dust particles. All these are needed to
visit Mars or the asteroids, and are
available on the moon “close by” in case of trouble.
The same base allows experimentation with ways and means to
dig and drill deep in a harsh environment.
It allows experimentation with the recovery of mineral resources. It allows experimentation with how to
establish roads under such conditions,
so that future long-distance surface transport becomes feasible. These things are needed for establishing
useful and prosperous industrial applications on the moon and Mars, and to some extent the asteroids.
This is the kind of thing we should have attempted to close-out
Apollo, had a useful lunar presence been
the goal, instead of
“flags-and-footprints”. It is still a
good rationale for returning and doing something very much like what I
described here, as a first step.
Addendum: Crew Dragon Modified to Leave Lunar Orbit
The “design” trajectory to reach lunar orbit is pretty much
the same as was used for Apollo decades ago. A direct launch from Canaveral into low Earth
orbit more or less eastward at low inclination (the part requiring factoring
ideal delta-vee for gravity and drag losses),
followed by a burn to escape onto the lunar transfer trajectory, and a final upper-stage burn to place the
payload into a retrograde orbit about the moon.
The worst-case total rocket design delta-vee for this is just about 12.4
km/s (factored), and worst-case 0.8 km/s
to leave lunar orbit onto a trajectory home.
See Figure 3.
Figure 3 – Design Trajectory and Delta-Vee Requirements
Design Requirements
for Modified Crew Dragon
Total delta-vee capability 1.35 km/s min, 1.40 preferred. Maximum spacecraft mass at launch 13.0 metric
tons. Minimum crew 3. I have a spreadsheet model already
constructed for this purpose, which I
proceeded to run again for these exact numbers.
Masses for the dry weights of capsule and trunk (before modification)
are my best guesses, but their sum
matches published data.
The modification is to install more tanks of NTO-MMH
propellants in the trunk, to a maximum
of the 3000 kg quoted cargo capacity for that trunk. I estimated propellant-tank mass split as
95-5 or a 19:1 ratio, same as for the
landers. I did not estimate
volumes, although there are 14 cubic
meters available in the trunk for this.
Results That Bound
the Design
These are shown in Figure 4.
Payload mass is limited more by the 13.00 ton thrown weight than the
1.35-1.4 km/s delta-vee requirement. That
payload mass is 1760 kg.
The per person allotment we used for the lander was 200 kg
person-plus-suit, and 100 kg of packed life
support supplies. The life support
supplies are probably a bit of an overkill,
so 1760 kg ~ 1800 kg, and 1800 kg
/ 300 kg/person is crew = 6 max.
Slightly less actually. Call
it no more than 5 crew at a time, plus
life support supplies, and no more than
about 150 kg of equipment or cargo in the capsule with them, for the trip to the moon.
Having the extra delta-vee means we can carry 6 crew, even 7,
home. That is a good safety
bonus. Crew Dragon is supposedly rated
for the same cargo home as cargo Dragon (3000 kg), so we are well within that limit.
This was accomplished by adding 2800 kg propellants to the
trunk, which also adds 147 kg of tank
inerts to the trunk inert weight. That
leaves a smidge for any extra plumbing before we hit the 3000 kg limit.
Figure 4 – Modifying Crew Dragon Into Lunar Orbit Dragon for
Falcon-Heavy Launch
Final Remarks
With these two bounding analyses, I have shown how it is possible to ship
13-ton lunar cargo and crew landers to the lunar orbit with Falcon-Heavy as the
launch rocket. I have also shown how it
is possible to ship crews to lunar orbit with the same rocket and a 13 ton
modified crew Dragon that has 2.8 extra tons of propellant in its trunk, connected to the Super Draco thruster systems
in the capsule.
The cargo landers deliver slightly over 5.3 tons to the
surface. The crew landers have a 5.3 ton
ascent stage that could carry as many as 6 crew back to lunar orbit.
At only $17M/delivered ton,
building a practical small experiment station that is permanently
occupied becomes easily possible, at a
price far below what was experienced doing the Apollo “flag-and-footprints”
stuff during the cold war.
What makes this feasible is a heavy lift rocket of adequate
size to put 13-ton payloads into lunar orbit,
and at a commercial launcher’s far lower price. This is true flying the rockets
fully-expendably. This capability should
become available within the next 1-2 years.
All that is needed from a vehicle development standpoint is
the two versions of the lander designed to these bounding limits, and then developed and made ready for
use. These share a common descent
stage. That should help lower costs and
development time.
Adding propellant capacity to crewed Dragon with tankage in
the trunk is not so much development work,
more of a routine modification that can be tested all-up in Earth
orbit, to make it ready to use.
We’ll need a 2 or 3 seat open electric rover car that weighs
no more than a ton. Between the Apollo
rovers and the recent Mars robot rovers,
this should not be a major development item.
Development,
yes, just not a “biggie”. Same for a 2-ton electric front-end
loader.
The hardest nut to crack is a surface habitat that can be
assembled from modules that fit within the 5 ton lander payload capacity, and that can be erected by men on foot in
spacesuits with hand tools. The idea is
to assemble it in an excavation done with the front end loader, and then bury it at least partially with that
front end loader.
This is the kind of thing that could be done within 1 or 2
presidential terms, which would net
returns orders of magnitude greater than Apollo, for costs orders of magnitude less than
Apollo.
Great analysis! It sounds promising for lunar missions in the near future.
ReplyDeleteI think the 5-ton module problem can be solved by using inflatable sections that can be joined together end-to-end to create habitats. They can then be layered with insulation and covered in dirt for protection against the sun and radiation.
Well there is a 3.7*10m second stage tank in the same LLO. Surely somewhere there has been a sugestion to use those as habitats.
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