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JP Aerospace Airship to Orbit project |
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| Jun4-12, 09:19 AM | #1 |
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JP Aerospace Airship to Orbit project
I was looking at JP Aerospace's Airship to Orbit project: http://www.jpaerospace.com/atohandout.pdf
I was with it until the third phase: For a big airship to perform this feat, I would assume that drag is minimal at this high an altitude, but will accelerating to escape velocity at this altitude still cause massive amounts of heat on the surface on the airship? Will a heat shield be necessary? Does anyone think this is feasible? |
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| Jun5-12, 08:41 PM | #2 |
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Not sure. Maybe they are using ion propulsion. Propeller will be quite useless in empty space.
They want to use buoyancy to climb up to 200,000 feet which is very high, which may require a very big air balloon! The airship floats high enough to escape earth (very slowly), so i think the heat generated by drag will be insignificant compared to the direct heating from the sun radiation. |
| Jun18-12, 01:55 PM | #3 |
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Honestly I don't think the technical description give me warm fuzzies. It's all very hand-wavy, and provides very crude pictures of their design concepts. I have a hard time believing they will be able to lift and accelerate large payloads into orbit, but I'm not 100% clear on their entire proposed concept.
One problem I saw: Also, how will they address the constant leaking of helium from the ship? I suspect it will be pretty bad especially in the vacuum with just a thin skin holding it in. |
| Jun18-12, 02:49 PM | #4 |
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JP Aerospace Airship to Orbit projectRespectfully submitted, Steve |
| Jun18-12, 03:07 PM | #5 |
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I think they may mean this byelectric propulsion
I'm thinking heat will be an issue here. They say they'll spend several days reaching orbital velocity...well, heating may not be an issue in the upper levels of the atmosphere for something like the shuttle, but spending near a day at nigh-orbital velocity will not bode well for a large, blunt, thin-surfaced craft.... |
| Jun18-12, 04:32 PM | #6 |
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| Jun18-12, 09:17 PM | #7 |
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Well even though they test in Helium I never imagined they would use it. If it were up to me I would use Hydrogen and make the whole process unmanned (to prevent loss of life if the worst happened), new work in Graphene Oxides provide a reasonably effective film against the loss of light gasses.
What I am more concerned with is the drag that a non-rigid airship would go through at escape velocity, but is it actually that big of a concern at such a high altitude? |
| Jun19-12, 03:07 AM | #8 |
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The spaceship, wich must be made of very flimsy materials, won't be able to stand the high temperatures and high dynamic pressure. You also need a saturn -V engine, to drive such a thing, not an ion engine. |
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