This article is about modifying a pre-existing design
rough-out for a suborbital Mars rocket “hopper”, into a design also capable of operating as a
low Mars orbit personnel taxi. That
original rocket hopper design rough-out is covered in the article titled
“Rocket Hopper for Mars Planetary Transportation”, dated 1 November 2023, and posted on this site.
The
Problem
Started with a suborbital “hopper”
10
persons aboard on p-suits
Short-term
life support plus small luggage
Could it also serve as a low orbit taxi?
Same
payload
As indicated in the table just above, I started with the earlier design rough-out
that was only a suborbital “hopper”. The
idea was to carry 10 persons as the payload.
Although the cabin is pressurized,
these persons ride in pressure suits for a safety backup. There are limited supplies of oxygen and
drinking water, plus minimal snack
foods, for up to a few hours’ ride. A small luggage allowance was included. The same payload would be carried to any low
orbit destination.
As indicated in Figure 1 just below, the suborbital trajectory is actually an
ellipse in polar coordinates, one with
its periapsis inside the planet. The
vehicle launches into a gravity turn that reaches a suitable velocity and path
angle at the entry interface altitude,
coasting from there.
The best place to do a course correction is the apoapsis
outside the sensible atmosphere, where
speeds are lowest and directions are easiest to change. The entry conditions mirror the exit
conditions, with no burn. The landing is a direct rocket-braked descent
from the end-of-hypersonics point at local Mach 3 (about 0.7 km/s speed). 45
degrees of trajectory “droop” along a straight-line path is presumed. I factored-up the speed to “kill” by 2, to budget the final landing mass
ratio-effective delta-vee (dV).
As illustrated in Figure 2 just below, I used a surface-grazing ellipse as the
initial transfer trajectory to the 300 km nominal low orbit altitude. Like the long-range suborbital mission, the vehicle launches into a gravity
turn, putting it onto the proper path at
the entry interface altitude, at end of
launch burn. Only the path angle is
different, being a lot smaller. The entry point after de-orbiting is the
mirror image.
There is a small burn at apoapsis to raise the periapsis to the entry interface altitude, with a period shorter than the target low circular orbit altitude. This ellipse is the parking orbit in which to “chase” any target in the low circular orbit. Once synchronized, there is another small burn to circularize, followed by a traverse to rendezvous, plus a budget to actually dock. Deorbiting is another small burn, back onto the surface-grazing ellipse that guarantees entry. The direct rocket-braked landing is identical to that of the long suborbital trajectory, except that, as it turned out, the end-of-hypersonics altitude is higher, coming back from orbit at the lower entry angle.
Figure 1 – Suborbital Missions, Longest-Range Shown
Figure 2 – The Orbital Mission, Including “Chase”, Rendezvous,
and Docking
To accommodate the more demanding mission, I resized the candidate LOX-LCH4 engine
design, and revised the inert masses
upward a little. Entry conditions forced
me to increase the diameter and length a little, in order to keep the entry ballistic
coefficient down to tolerable values.
The original rough-out had two sets of tanks: mains and headers. The landing and course correction propellant
was in the headers, with the launch
propellant in the mains.
This became 3 sets of tanks and two different engine designs. The launch-and-landing main engines stayed
about the same at 30,000 lb thrust, each
of 4, drawing from the mains for launch
and headers for landing. I was able to
increase the expansion ratio and specific impulse a little bit. See Figure 3 for the basic layout
revisions.
But course correction suborbitally, and all the orbital maneuvering, rendezvous,
and docking, really needed much
lower thrust levels. So I sized some
lower-pressure, pressure-fed engines of
only 550 lb thrust, each of 4. These used a small third set of 800 psi
pressurized propellant tanks, plus a
supply of dry nitrogen gas at 2200 psi to power this, in one of two options examined.
Figure 3 – Revised Internal Layout at Larger Diameter and
Length
Because the inert fraction increased a bit, I resized the expansion of the main engines
to increase specific impulse a bit, to
compensate as much as possible. The
original “hopper” main engines had an expansion ratio sized for incipient
separation at 67% chamber pressure, if
fired in the open air at sea level on Earth.
I raised that to 80%. See Figure
4 just below.
The idea was to enable easy and relatively inexpensive
development testing on Earth. The change
was small, but every little bit
helps. These being full flow cycle, turbo-pumped engines of significant thrust
level, I did not want to complicate
things by adding vacuum bell extensions that were not regeneratively cooled. These do not push the state of the art very
hard, being only 2000 psia chamber
pressure.
Figure 4 – Reworked Main Engine Design for Slightly Higher
Expansion
The original “hopper” design study convinced me that I did
not need the large main engine thrust levels to do course corrections on the
suborbital missions, or orbital
maneuvering, rendezvous, and docking,
on the orbital mission. I kept
the redundancy of 4 engines, but sized
for crudely only 0.1 gee of vehicle acceleration, once exoatmospheric.
Since the propellant quantities would be small, the simplification of a pressure-fed design would
be beneficial. Alternatively, since the engines were small, they could be fed by electric-driven
positive-displacement pumps. Either
way, I picked a simple conical bell shape, two-piece,
with a bell extension that was not regeneratively cooled, as shown in Figure 5 just below. Development testing on Earth could be done
without the extension, but operations on
Mars or in space would use the bell extension.
This was not a throttleable design.
I ran numbers both ways for the propellant feed to the
maneuvering engines. I did not like the
pumping power required for the positive-displacement pumped option. It implied very heavy batteries, even for the modest propellant
quantities. Regulated constant inert gas
pressure on the propellant tanks turned out to be the better option. These used a small third set of 800 psi
pressurized propellant tanks, plus a
supply of dry nitrogen gas at 2200 psi to power this. The chamber pressures were low enough to keep
the pressures fairly modest on the tanks,
so that at small size, they were
not that big an inert weight penalty. See
Figure 6 just below.
There were many false starts and iteration cycles to achieve
all of this, none of which is covered
here. The result is summarized in the
unavoidably-busy figure, Figure 7
just below, which includes a weight
statement that also displays mass fractions.
Figure 5 – Smaller Maneuvering Engines as Sized
Figure 6 – Of the Options,
Pressurized Tanks Seemed Best
Figure 7 – Summary Data for the Final Rough-Out Design
Of interest would be the various tank volumes. Bear in mind these are fully filled for the
mission to low circular Mars orbit at only low inclinations eastward, and also fully-filled for the long-range
suborbital mission (at low or high inclinations). The headers and maneuvering tanks are always
fully-filled, but the mains are only
partially filled for the shorter-range suborbital missions, so that entry mass is not too big.
Suborbital ranges from 9400 to just under 500 km were
examined in this study. Their entry
angles turned out to be a strong function of the suborbital mission
ranges. All of those suborbital entry angles
were considerably steeper than the return from the orbital mission. They were determined by feasible altitudes at
end-of-hypersonics, and by feasible peak
entry gee values.
Figure 8 just below shows the final plots I got of
various flight data during entry and final descent. The Suborbital trajectories form trends, and the orbital data fall way off those
trends. Upper left is end-of-hypersonics
altitude and entry angle vs entry speed.
Upper right are the peak heating values during entry. Lower left are the trends of peak entry
gee, and average gee during the final
rocket-braked landings. There is a
numbered key relating the missions to each data point in each plot. No gee level exceeds 4.5, and no stagnation heating level exceeds 12.5
W/cm2.
Figure 8 – Data for Entry,
Descent, and Landing (E, D, &
L)
Once again in Figure 9 just below, the suborbital data for surface temperatures
also form trends versus entry speed,
with the orbital data falling far off of those trend lines, plus a numbered mission key. There are trends for surface temperatures at
the stagnation line, temperatures for
its lateral surfaces where flow is still attached, and temperatures for leeward separated wake
zone surfaces. These were figured for
thermal re-radiation exactly balancing convective-only input, as figured for a “dark” highly-emissive
surface, of thermal emissivity 0.8 as
representative.
Note that with the exception of only the longest-range
suborbital mission, all the rest of
these data are under 1600 F, and would
permit exposed-metal construction of 316L stainless steel, or of Inconel X-750, or something in that same class! And that even includes the return from
the orbital mission! Because of
the stagnation zone temperature approaching 2000 F on the longest-range
suborbital mission, there needs to be
some minimal heat protection in and near the stagnation zone.
In Figure 10 just below, the format for surface pressures is
similar: trends of suborbital surface
pressure vs entry speed at stagnation,
at lateral sides, and in the
separated leeside wake. The orbital data
again fall far off the trend lines.
There is a numbered key to relate missions to individual data
points. Note that no mission, not even the longest-range suborbital, exceeds 0.19 atmosphere anywhere. That would be about 2.79 psi, very modest indeed.
Given the hot material strengths reported as part of Figure
9, that means even a fragile
extreme-low-density alumino-silicate ceramic composite could serve as heat
protection. So could ceramic fabric
blanket or quilt-type materials, if they
survive wind shear. Even a thin sheet
of 2000 F-capable metal overlying mineral wool insulation would serve, mounted only locally near the stagnation
line.
Conclusion: the “hopper” could easily be designed to also
serve as a low orbit taxi!
Figure 9 – Trends of Surface Temperatures vs Entry Speed
Figure 10 – Trends of Surface Pressures vs Entry Speed
Update 11-22-2023: The following Figure 11 illustrates exactly why the surface emissivity must be high (a very dark or black surface color, with a dull finish). There are exposed metallic construction solutions and a refractory solution with simple alumino-silicate ceramics, especially away from the stagnation zone, if emissivity is high. There ae only ablative solutions available if emissivity is low.
Figure 11 -- More Detailed Hopper/Taxi Heating Data
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