MUZE
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Could a hybrid airship like spacecraft ever so slowly shed speed using Mars' atmosphere while remaining low orbit while buoyant enough to serve as a glider?
I'm sorry, but this post doesn't make much sense to me. The terms you are using don't seem to apply to how you are using them:MUZE said:Could a hybrid airship like spacecraft ever so slowly shed speed using Mars' atmosphere while remaining low orbit while buoyant enough to serve as a glider?
The extra surface area of an airship/glider will slow differently compared to a rocket at a much higher altitude, but how? The airship would need some rigidity, provided from the internal air pressure. Because the atmosphere does not have a solid line like water and the airship on contact with the atmosphere at interplanetary speeds would not "splat." Ideally once inside the atmosphere and landed, the inflatable portion of the ship can be used to create a biodome. Would a feather burn up on reentry?russ_watters said:I'm sorry, but this post doesn't make much sense to me. The terms you are using don't seem to apply to how you are using them:
1. A spaceship in orbit has no need for or ability to have buoyancy.
2. Gliders aren't buoyant, they glide on wings.
I'm not sure how this airship idea is forming, but Mars's atmosphere is really thin...
Aerobraking is possible without going to such lengths; it's already a normal component of all spacecraft that go to planets with atmospheres (including Earth).MUZE said:The extra surface area of an airship/glider will slow differently compared to a rocket at a much higher altitude, but how?
Other than being capable of being used as a biodome, what benefit would the airship provide? I'm not seeing that you're saying anything about what it would do once inside the atmosphere.The airship would need some rigidity, provided from the internal air pressure. Because the atmosphere does not have a solid line like water and the airship on contact with the atmosphere at interplanetary speeds would not "splat." Ideally once inside the atmosphere and landed, the inflatable portion of the ship can be used to create a biodome. Would a feather burn up on reentry?
The ship could land without or use far less fuel. On departure the blimp materal could be left behind.russ_watters said:Aerobraking is possible without going to such lengths; it's already a normal component of all spacecraft that go to planets with atmospheres (including Earth).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerobraking
I don't see what value an airship/glider configuration would add, and you're not really saying what value you think it will add. Even if you are just trying to ask "would it work?" I still need to know what you want it to work at in order to be able to answer.
Other than being capable of being used as a biodome, what benefit would the airship provide? I'm not seeing that you're saying anything about what it would do once inside the atmosphere.
All recent Mars landers I'm aware of have landed without fuel, using parachutes and/or airbags (landers on Earth never use fuel). I suppose a balloon would work as a way to provide a soft landing, but it would probably need to act as or be in addition to a parachute first. And it would add the weight of the envelope and extra hydrogen tanks. It doesn't offer any advantages I can think of.MUZE said:The ship could land without or use far less fuel.
You mean the storm.Dullard said:"BTW, the atmo on Mars is about 2% of Earth's. It is a virtual vacuum."
This was my 1 major complaint about "The Martian" (which I otherwise loved). Somehow, that thin atmosphere managed to shred his habitat.