DailyDirt: Who Wants To Go To Space?
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Reusable rocket technology has been a 'holy grail' of sorts for space exploration. Building reusable components is supposed to make space travel more affordable, but the Space Shuttle is the prime example of how that's not necessarily true, as it cost over an order of magnitude more than originally planned. Still, it should be possible to make reusable rockets that are cheaper to operate, and some private companies are figuring out how to do it. SpaceX hasn't quite gotten reusable rockets perfected yet (though, it has done it more than a few times with its Grasshopper vehicle). And depending on how you define a "rocket" -- Virgin Galactic & Scaled Composites have also developed reusable space vehicles.- Blue Origin has successfully landed a rocket after it launched to a suborbital altitude. Elon Musk rightly points out that this isn't exactly the first time a suborbital rocket has landed in reusable condition, but it's still nice to see rocket technology improving and getting cheaper to operate. [url]
- Jeff Bezos is moving his space company to Florida to build and launch its rockets near NASA's government facilities -- the Kennedy Space Center and the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Blue Origin will be making its rocket engines in the good ol' USA, and its BE-3 engine is the one that will be reusable. (note: The BE-3 isn't as powerful as Blue Origin's BE-4 engine which is more comparable to SpaceX's reusable rocket.) [url]
- Lots of people credit Jules Verne for inspiring spaceflight, but the first proposal of rocket-based spaceflight actually comes from Canadian William Leitch in 1861. Leitch's paper was written 4 years before Verne's book "From the Earth to the Moon" -- and decades before plausible rocket-powered space plans from Russian Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and American Robert Goddard were written. But does it matter who thought of something first, or who actually executes it? [url]
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Filed Under: elon musk, grasshopper, jeff bezos, jules verne, kennedy space center, konstantin tsiolkovsky, new shepard, re-usable rockets, robert goddard, rockets, space, space exploration, suborbital, william leitch
Companies: blue origin, nasa, spacex
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the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
Even The Russians ditched their copycat shuttle program.
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Re: the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
After it got out of committee it was an over-priced moving van, the engines and fuel tank had to be proportionally bigger and more powerful and it even needed solid-state boosters just to get off the pad.
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Re: the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
The difference is that Hubble was designed to be serviced in space by the Shuttle. And so the Shuttle essentially did it's first mission early and repaired Hubble. In your non-shuttle world it would have been a write-off.
Later servicing missions not only greatly extended Hubble's life, but gave it capabilities far beyond the original design.
No space walks means no space station, no missions beyond Low Earth Orbit, and virtually no repair or recovery missions.
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Re: Re: the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
The shuttle was supposed to be the cargo craft for a major space station in the 70s but Nixon killed it leaving the shuttle. This left a space cargo truck with nothing to really haul.
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Re: Re: the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
However, even with that There were some serious design issues with the shuttle such as placing the shuttle not on top of the rocket. This lead to multiple issues with protective tiles being damaged and caused the last shuttle disintegration
The shuttle was supposed to be the cargo craft for a major space station in the 70s but Nixon killed it leaving the shuttle. This left a space cargo truck with nothing to really haul.
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Everyone will!
Startram and maglev leo vehicles work, but were going to have to build that large space ship in low gravity before we can send millions of people to mars, triton, or europa.
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Re: Re: Re: the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
It was only after the Challenger Shuttle blew up that the "powers that be" realized that, unlike conventional rockets, there was no separate escape pod and no way to incorporate one, other than scrapping the whole thing and re-designing the shuttle from the ground up. And when it became painfully obvious that the cost to repair and re-launch existing satellites (which was the primary selling point of the shuttle in the first place) was more expensive than simply replacing the satellites whenever they broke or fell to Earth, then the whole rationale the space shuttle program was based on was essentially a massive fraud. Just like the Iraq war, the space shuttle was another huge waste of taxpayer money that should never have happened.
The decision to abandon the space shuttle and instead base the US space program on surplus (and dirt-cheap) Russian rockets was one of the very few common-sense, cost-saving desisions that ever came out of Washington. But once again, politics is now in the process of overruling that logic.
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Re: much more political than rational
This is why the Shuttle has such big wings, for atmospheric maneouvring. A capability which was never used once in its operational lifetime.
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Re: the space shuttle was a boondoggle!
Personally, I always saw the shuttle as the first step toward making space travel routine rather than making each trip into space a project that needed to be specially built just for that mission.
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The Space Race
Also, Blue Origin and SpaceX are doing VERY different kinds of trips into space:
- Blue Origin is basically a bottle rocket: it goes straight up, enters the edge of "space", then falls back down.
- SpaceX does the same as Blue Origin, but then ALSO accelerates the craft horizontally to a speed of 8 Km/s or about 18,000 miles per hour. That's 18,000 miles per hour FASTER than Blue Origin - not an insignificant difference when it comes to how much energy is needed. The energy is a factor of about 30x.
Blue Origin, in it's current model, does not and cannot launch anything into an orbit. It's more like this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kK62tfoCmuQ
Which is cool for a brief space travel with a short period of weightlessness. At the top of the flight, the force of gravity is still about the same as on earth's surface, and speed is 0. Free fall down occurs.
In contrast, in a Low Earth Orbit from SpaceX vessels, the force of gravity remains about the same as on earth, but the free fall is never-ending because the 8km/s lateral speed means that the upward component of your lateral motion exactly offsets the downward motion of your free fall. aka orbit.
So, while Blue Origin may someday also do LEO flights, for now they are dealing with a challenge that is 30x less energy intensive, as compared to SpaceX.
And, yeah, I'm a total Musk fanboy. 100%. I've never fanboyed anyone in five decades, and I've chosen him to start. Totes better than Bieber.
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here's how your trip is going to go down. . .
Your going to pack your "toolkit" basically everything you ever did to whatever microprocessor you loved into digital files, you can keep your custom stuff you use, as your own stuff IS the most productive. But the data will get compressed and cloned and backed up and did I mention made light weight.
You can bring XX LBS of stuff.
The day of your leaving they send your stuff ahead.
Then you go.
For awhile everything seems normal, then suddenly the spaceship makes a hard right, and heads to a slave mining planet, where they dump you out and keep and sell all your prized stuff.
Since you signed a contract, your done.
So Just Remember
In space, Nobody can hear you scream
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Who wants to go to space?
More and more the future is looking like a combination of Elysium and Soylent Green. Country living, fresh air, and now space travel for the upper-crust; sardine-can urban misery and homelessness here on Earth for the rest of us.
At least time travel has been proven possible, DeLorean not required. #ItsTheCurrentYear and yet we're somewhere in the middle between the Dickens era and the Gilded Age. So much for a Star Trek post-scarcity society. Bah humbug indeed.
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Going to Space in Style
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tripropellant_rocket
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Re: Everyone will!
No, the real problem will be deciding which corporation gets to strip-mine it...
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Re: The Space Race
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle
So the "cost savings" of reusing parts existed, but they were negated by the refurbishing costs of replacing all the heat shield tiles on the shuttle, etc, etc.
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