How far can we go with space drives and the third law?

In summary, the technology to propel a craft across the solar system is not feasible within the time frame that is necessary.
  • #1
Lothlorien
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Hi all.

I'm new here and I appreciate any help on this question:

Under the premise of E=mc^2, m=E/c^2 and the more energy you gift your propulsion device and the faster the exit speed I'm trying to figure out exactly why making some sort of high speed mass driver system as a propulsion drive is not feasible.

Granted, this question is for making a few decisions on a SCI fi script and I'm just trying to work out how far to stretch the windows of possibility, say, in 50 years, could we have drives that still eject mass but with sufficient efficiency and impulse (with whatever methods) so as to allow adequate interplanetary travel, at least for the inner solar system.

Cheers.
 
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  • #3
Adequate being that it is within a craft's abilities to perform multiple course corrections, not require gravity-assists and not have to rely on meticulously precalculated trajectories to allow the easiest possible route. In other words, the craft would have enough propulsion and enough endurance to go from, say, Earth to Mars regardless of position / aphelion of the two planets - and I guess one could throw in the ability to turn back at any point for whatever reason. This, to me, is what constitutes a space-faring societies minimum requirements adequately.
 
  • #4
So if it took 10 years to get from the Earth to the moon, that would be OK?
 
  • #5
phinds said:
So if it took 10 years to get from the Earth to the moon, that would be OK?
Well, if a craft had the capabilities I described earlier, for example not requiring carefully precalculated trajectories, then this means it has to be able to move at a decent pace for extended periods of time. Otherwise the thrust would not be adequate to move the craft against the natural inclination of space time. It would mean it would have to be able to resist the gravitational pull of incidental nearby planets if they would counteract the intended progress of the craft. This implies a fairly strong thrust (compared to, say, an ion drive) which is at least capable of moving the craft in this manner. With this level of thrust I would think it would cover the Earth Moon trip in hours or days. Not years.
 
  • #6
Yes, but "I think" is not a specification. What I am trying to get you to realize is that you have not really laid out enough specifics for your question to have any kind of realistic answer. What EXACTLY do you want it to be able to do? How much payload should it carry? How long to the target? What IS the target. How many crew? Duration of stay? You have not even begun to answer the kinds of questions that are needed in order for this to be a anything more than a fairly meaningless discussion.
 
  • #7
I had a feeling you were doing this for such a reason. That is why I precluded my post with an explanation on why I am enquiring. It is for a SCI fi script and thus I'm more after a general opinion rather than a specific answer.
 
  • #8
Lothlorien said:
I had a feeling you were doing this for such a reason. That is why I precluded my post with an explanation on why I am enquiring. It is for a SCI fi script and thus I'm more after a general opinion rather than a specific answer.
Then just make stuff up and gloss over it. It's the story that matters, not the technology.
 
  • #9
I was hoping for something a little better than that which is why I'm trying to go the extra mile. As long as the underlying general concepts are sound then yes I am more than happy to gloss over the specifics. However in trying to describe the general principles behind a futuristic propulsion system and assuming that no further breakthroughs into more advanced methods were discovered I was just curious as to how far we could push the current method of "shooting stuff out the back to go in the other direction". but thank you for your time.
 
  • #10
You seem to think that technology is the issue. It is not. COST is the issue, and you have to answer all those other pesky questions before you can answer that question. And underlying the question of cost is the question of motivation. With the very small widespread motivation we have now, improvements will be very slow. If we had unquestionable data showing that the Earth was going to be obliterated in say 15 years or so if we did not develop a massive space capability beyond what we already have, that would change the motivation.
 
  • #11
Ok I understand where you are coming from. I was surely under the impression that I didn't need to answer these things in that order, especially if it is not for a real world proposal, engineering design or project? If you'd like to fill in those blanks yourself and qualify your answer that way, that would be fine by me. All I'm interested in are speculated examples of what people think is feasible and realistic.

PS: I also now realize I have posted this in the wrong forum. This belongs in the Writing Forum. My apologies.
 
  • #12
E = mc2 isn't what's important here. First let's look at kinetic energy and force:

Ke = 1/2mv2
F = ma

Take the example of a 1,000kg probe. If it expels 1kg of propellant at 100m/s then the force = 1kg * 100m/s = 100 Newtons. Divide that by the mass of the probe and you get the final velocity = 100 / 1,000 = 0.1m/s. If that's all the fuel it has then 0.1m/s is the Delta-V

How much energy did it take to do that? The kinetic energy of the fuel = 1/2 * 1kg * 100m/s2 = 5,000 joules. That's not much, but it also doesn't get us much. At 0.1m per second our probe isn't going anywhere fast, it's not even getting out of Earth orbit. There are two ways to solve this: expel the propellant at a higher speed (i.e. increase the exhaust velocity) or expel more propellant at once (i.e. increase propellant flow).

Lets go with the first scenario and this time have the exhaust velocity be 1000m/s instead. Running through the same calculations:

F = 1 * 1000 = 1000n
Dv = 1000 / 1000 = 1m/s
Ke = 1/2 * 1 * 10002 = 500,000J

Notice that we've increased the exhaust velocity by 10x but the energy required has gone up 100x. This is because kinetic energy increases with the square of the velocity. It doesn't take long for this to become extremely unmanageable: requiring very advanced power systems on the ship, engines that can use them effectively and a host of support systems like heat radiators. All of that adds complexity and mass. And don't forget this is the theoretical minimum if the rocket is perfectly energy efficient, which it won't be!

What about the other scenario of keeping exhaust velocity the same but increasing propellant flow? Energy increases linearly with that, throw out ten times as much propellant at the same speed and it will cost you ten times as much energy. On the face of it that seems more sensible except you now have to carry a lot more mass. We've been ignoring the mass of the fuel so far but obviously it has mass. If you add 10kg of fuel then the probe now weighs 1010kg and so we need to bring a little bit extra for that extra. To find out how much we can use the Tsiolkovsky rocket equation. That's a bit more complex to work through so I won't do it here (I advice looking through it and putting it into a spread sheet to play around with) but a 1,000kg probe with an exhaust velocity of 100m/s aiming to reach 1m/s needs to carry 10.05kg of fuel. If you want to go 10m/s and keep exhaust velocity the same the probe needs 105.7kg of fuel. So you've increased the speed by 10x but increased the fuel requirement by 10.6x. This problem only gets worse the faster you go.

This is the fundamental problem with space travel. It requires ludicrous amounts of mass and energy to go anywhere "fast". As you want to have technology not be much greater than what it is now you're going to be stuck with this problem. The very best we could probably do with current technology would be to use a nuclear thermal rocket which were investigated decades ago but never developed. If you have a little wiggle room you could use a plasma rocket but even plugging the estimated capabilities of those into the rocket equation won't end up with people jetting round the solar system in a matter of days. Years for the outer-system, maybe a few months for the inner.
 
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  • #13
Ryan_m_b said:
Notice that we've increased the exhaust velocity by 10x but the energy required has gone up 100x. This is because kinetic energy increases with the square of the velocity.
Thank you for this. I will have to investigate nuclear thermal. If this is the orion project then that has huge design issues all on its own iirc Finally, there seem to be a few advancements on the horizon for ion drives at the moment in terms of allowing higher thrust yet maintaining the efficiency. I guess that may, depending on how far they can take that tech (perhaps even an array of them) be another possibility even though it's a stretch.

Cheers.
 
  • #14
No nuclear thermal isn't project orion. The idea behind nuclear thermal is that you heat up propellant by passing it over a nuclear reactor. The heat causes it to massively expand and shoot out of the nozzle at high speed.

We could probably help you more if you answered some of the details that Phind's was getting at. What kind of world are you trying to write about? Is it one in which small teams of astronauts are sent on months-long missions to other planets or something much more advanced like the general public taking short holidays on Mars?

Knowing the size of the craft and the intended duration of an average journey will help in answering what technology is needed.
 
  • #15
Ok sure. I'll give the quick few-paragraph rundown: It is set in the near future. Earth and Mars are colonized with various trade routes and consumers have space corridors (series of mass accelerators / decelerators) that allow mass transit during certain earth/mars orbital positions. So there is trade, commerce, travel and piracy in these stories. Due to pirates, all craft alter their course multiple times every hour to a random vector along their actual trajectory with reasoning being a ship on a constant course could easily be destroyed or intercepted with ballstic matter set up hours or days in advance. As for the propulsion: Currently we are depicting ion drives with fission reactors for the larger ships. I have the larger ships run solely on ion drives, smaller scout ships run on ion drives with a chemical rocket booster (as they are used to spy on enemy ships in the story) to get out of areas really quick.

Military craft main weaponry are mass drivers. Area of engagement is in the less-than-300,000km range for kinetic bombardment. Military craft also use spinning gyroscopes to alter where they are pointing in space instead of expelling precious propellant. Sudden evasive maneuvers are performed with what could best be described as a space anchor that shoots out of the craft in various directions and the craft can quickly alter its location by several hundred meters very quickly, in an attempt to evade the enemy bombardment. Basically its 1800s battleships and cannons again, just in space.

Edit: Summarised and took the useless bits out of my original post.
 
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  • #16
Ryan_m_b said:
Knowing the size of the craft and the intended duration of an average journey will help in answering what technology is needed.
Currently they are way too big to be feasible. Aircraft carrier sized. So this is where we are digging in and ripping the script to shreds and seeing what we can do to improve its realism, so I'm guessing if we can work out how far in the realm of possibility we can achieve some of these storyline battles in space, I'd adjust the ship size downward as much as possible. I hope the realistic number isn't too, erm, small :O
 
  • #17
How do your space corridors work? Are they some sort of megascale magnetic catapult? Have you looked into the idea of a Mars cycler, they might fit what you need. The idea is to have a large spacecraft that orbits the sun in such a way that it regularly intercepts Earth and Mars. Smaller craft/cargo would jettison off of it to be caught by some sort of breaking system and outbound craft/cargo are accelerated up to dock with it.

Pirates...are a tricky one to justify in space. There is no stealth in space[1] (at least without really contrived circumstances). Pirates could be easily seen and tracked back to wherever they come from. Even if there was a space station that would allow them to dock and hide them it would be trivial for a belligerent faction to attack or blockade it. Perhaps instead the political situation could be such that you have customs officials acting like pirates. Various Mars factions may sponsor these groups to carry out technically legal "random inspections for contraband and tariff control" when really what they're doing is identifying potentially rich targets, corruptly auditing them and finding a reason to "confiscate" the cargo.

Aircraft carrier mass is indeed huge. Do you really need that from a story perspective? How many actors do you expect to play ship roles? A large fast[2] military ship could be >90% fuel by mass and be crewed by a dozen people and a few robots.

[1] This also makes scout craft almost completely obsolete. With a large enough telescope array (which would be well within the means of an interplanetary economy to make, it would likely be necessary for traffic control) could could track every craft in the solar system. Space is cold, real cold, and spacecraft have to be close to 300 kelvin in heat to keep their human occupants alive. Far more if they've got nuclear reactors because they have to dump a lot of waste heat.

[2] "Fast" as in able to maintain centigee acceleration for sustained periods allowing for Earth/Mars transfer in 6-7 weeks, at the cost of an eye-wateringly huge bill.
 
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  • #18
Ryan_m_b said:
How do your space corridors work? Are they some sort of megascale magnetic catapult? Have you looked into the idea of a Mars cycler, they might fit what you need. The idea is to have a large spacecraft that orbits the sun in such a way that it regularly intercepts Earth and Mars. Smaller craft/cargo would jettison off of it to be caught by some sort of breaking system and outbound craft/cargo are accelerated up to dock with it.

I guess megascale catapult is a good way of putting it. I imagine many of these in series, giving a rather brisk push to the craft at each stage. I thought a nice trick would be that you need to get a "partner" coming back the other way (Earth -> Mars, Mars -> Earth) of either another craft or you pay additional tax for them to send ballast / raw materials back the other way. That way the mass drivers, after all the catapulting has been done, waste as little precious fuel as possible station-keeping themselves. Supposedly the series of relays at the other end then slows them down. Perhaps they also are used, while they are in transit, as a drop-off vehicle to certain space-corridor-units. Perhaps each vehicle drops off 2 or 3 canisters of fuel and preprogrammed relay points (Sorry, getting rather deep in the whole fantasy technobabble. The point is it's just a way of leveraging movement in both directions and offsetting a large part of the propulsion to some sort of space infrastructure, leaving the craft propulsion system to course correct I guess).

EDIT: Oh, and of course, such a corridor would only be "open for business" at certain times of the earth/mars orbit.
Ryan_m_b said:
Pirates...are a tricky one to justify in space. There is no stealth in space[1] (at least without really contrived circumstances).
Indeed. I did have such contrived circumstances to allow them to exist. I initially included this in my previous response but I thought it was a whole lot of fluff and I didn't want to waste anyone's time reading about these useless details so I took it out. But now that you mention it, yes I did create such a contrived circumstance and it is basically this:

- We're going to have to assume that there are many many craft from many nations and they all have callsigns (similar to ocean vessels on Earth at present) and such pirates have counterfeit callsigns so they are in fact hiding in plain site.
- Also, perhaps a lot of space junk. Man-made. From mining and other such activity. So it may be a difficult task information-wise by authorities to identify pirates.
- In other words, I tried moving the battle of the space pirate into the information space rather than actual space. Thus the tracking of space pirates becomes a problem similar to tracking terrorists in a country in today's world. The problem is not getting SWAT to their door (the easy part), it's working out who is the real pirate. Easier said than done.

Ryan_m_b said:
Pirates could be easily seen and tracked back to wherever they come from. Even if there was a space station that would allow them to dock and hide them it would be trivial for a belligerent faction to attack or blockade it.

I was thinking of a few ways a pirate ship could mask itself is perhaps with some carefully constructed stealth shield/dome and all waste heat of the craft is removed by a very small single opening that is pointed towards a blank part of space but from what you said I'll have to rethink this whole area. Cheers.

Ryan_m_b said:
Perhaps instead the political situation could be such that you have customs officials acting like pirates. Various Mars factions may sponsor these groups to carry out technically legal "random inspections for contraband and tariff control" when really what they're doing is identifying potentially rich targets, corruptly auditing them and finding a reason to "confiscate" the cargo.

This is a great idea. I'm going to have to put this one aside :)

Ryan_m_b said:
Aircraft carrier mass is indeed huge. Do you really need that from a story perspective? How many actors do you expect to play ship roles? A large fast[2] military ship could be >90% fuel by mass and be crewed by a dozen people and a few robots.

[1] This also makes scout craft almost completely obsolete. With a large enough telescope array (which would be well within the means of an interplanetary economy to make, it would likely be necessary for traffic control) could could track every craft in the solar system. Space is cold, real cold, and spacecraft have to be close to 300 kelvin in heat to keep their human occupants alive. Far more if they've got nuclear reactors because they have to dump a lot of waste heat.

I can adjust the craft to whatever sizes are feasible. I was thinking with a few advanced nuclear reactors they'd get into the megawatt-ish range. Still a drop in the ocean in terms of the power needed to push these things with, say, ion propulsion, so I'm open to drastically reducing the craft size and/or their abilities. The thermal signature for the scouts may be occluded with some sort of advanced stealth exterior that concentrates waste heat into a single ray of particles that point to a blank region of space. I'm guessing that would make it pretty hard to track.

Plus, we have natural objects of occlusion that make it very hard to track everyone everywhere. The sun, for instance. Part of the storyline I'm working on is some-earth-faction fiddles with an asteroid on the other side of the sun, so by the time United Space whatever picks it up, it's on a collision course with country X and nobody knows who nudged it sort of scenario.

I'm not sure if I brought it up in my previous post before I edited it but, as with the point you raised, battles in open space don't happen in this fictional universe. They happen close to what I like to call "objects of occlusion". Planets, moons, asteroids, or man-made temporary clouds that occlude what can be tracked. This allows for some reasonably exciting battles. Just some military thing that deploys some gasseous substance that interferes with light. Perhaps infrared is the only Achilles heel in that system but I'm just going to have to concede that as one of those glossed over points. I'm sure the audience won't mind too much *eek*.

[2] "Fast" as in able to maintain centigee acceleration for sustained periods allowing for Earth/Mars transfer in 6-7 weeks, at the cost of an eye-wateringly huge bill.[/QUOTE]

I'm happy that a large part of the existing rocket bill (per pound of launch material in space, etc) is because the rocket programs by, say, NASA with the space shuttle had a lot of non-reusable stages. SpaceX's Falcon Heavy are literally an order of magnitude more dollar efficient. I think the total outlay of costings for fuel and other additonals comes to something very small, like only 2 million, compared with 20 million in running costs for a shuttle launch.

I will indeed rethink the space pirates role as this is looking not as rosy as before. I'm only with taking it out because I would have loved to put in a character talking about the irony of space travel being so simple back in the old days. Nowadays you got to waste twice as much fuel twisting and turning for nothing. Or some sort of throwaway line :D

Cheers.
 
  • #19
Posting from my phone so please forgive the format and brevity:

RE space catapult. In theory a long tube that fires a spacecraft could work, in practice it would be difficult to use on large, human crewed ships. The shorter the tube is the higher acceleration would be needed. To calculate this we can use a = v2/2L. A is the acceleration in m/s2, V is the final velocity in m/s and L is the length of the tube in metres. If we posit a 100km catapult (about 1000x the size of the international space station) and a velocity of 15km/s (IIRC the delta-V for an Earth/Mars transfer) that gives an acceleration of 1,125m/s. Divide that by 9.82 (the downward acceleration that objects on Earth experience) and you get a crazy 114.5gs!

That's not survivable by humans, it would likely wreck many machines too. If we up the size of the accelerator to 1,000km (a third of the diameter of the moon) the acceleration drops to an easier 11.45gs, but that's a huge object to manage. You also need to then work out the energy required. We know the absolute minimum from the kinetic energy, if we work out how long it takes to exit the tube we know how many seconds that can be spread over. To work out the time to exit the accelerator we use t = √2L/a. For the 1,000km version that's 133.333 seconds.

To plug that all together with the energy let's assume a 100 tonne space craft. At 15km/s it's kinetic energy is 1.125e13j, or to put it another way 11.25 terajoules (enough to power the whole world for two-thirds of a second). Spread out over 133.333 seconds that leads to an energy requirement of 84GW, that's around 40 nuclear power stations today.

It's easy to see with all this why these things would cost so much money. Even if the cost to launch to orbit was lowered and space manufacturing progressed were talking about systems that need to produce as much energy as a European nation just to operate. How much do you think the bill is for that?

RE stealth and debris. Space is really, really empty. Nothing to hide behind or occlude oneself. Even around a moon or planet a very simple spread of satellites will ensure sensors covering all angles. Attempting to pump heat and radiate out in one direction is dooable in theory but it would require one incredibly hot radiator and projecting heat in a small cone is quite hard. I'm skeptical it could be done for long periods of time without serious damage to the ship and the radiator. That's not to mention the fact the exhaust is like to be visible. In terms of traffic control and call signs space is too vast for that to matter. Even in orbit spacecraft are going to be pretty far apart, stay on highly predicable paths or be easily trackable once they move. Hiding in a crowd or in debris is simply not possible outside of soft-SF.

A couple of quick proposals:

1) Just ignore much of this. If you're not trying for hard-SF then it's not as important as a good story.

2) Look into beam propulsion, particularly M2P2 sails. You could potentially cut a lot of your problems RE travel if you assume the difficulties in beam propulsion have been fixed.

3) Perhaps step back a bit and post (or just think about) the story you want to tell. It might be that this is all putting the cart before the horse and there's a much simpler way to tell the story without diving into the complexities of how large scale interplanetary transport (and the societal consequences) would work.
 
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  • #20
Ryan_m_b said:
Posting from my phone so please forgive the format and brevity:

RE space catapult. In theory a long tube that fires a spacecraft could work, in practice it would be difficult to use on large, human crewed ships. The shorter the tube is the higher acceleration would be needed. To calculate this we can use a = v2/2L. A is the acceleration in m/s2, V is the final velocity in m/s and L is the length of the tube in metres. If we posit a 100km catapult (about 1000x the size of the international space station) and a velocity of 15km/s (IIRC the delta-V for an Earth/Mars transfer) that gives an acceleration of 1,125m/s. Divide that by 9.82 (the downward acceleration that objects on Earth experience) and you get a crazy 114.5gs!

That's not survivable by humans, it would likely wreck many machines too. If we up the size of the accelerator to 1,000km (a third of the diameter of the moon) the acceleration drops to an easier 11.45gs, but that's a huge object to manage. You also need to then work out the energy required. We know the absolute minimum from the kinetic energy, if we work out how long it takes to exit the tube we know how many seconds that can be spread over. To work out the time to exit the accelerator we use t = √2L/a. For the 1,000km version that's 133.333 seconds.

To plug that all together with the energy let's assume a 100 tonne space craft. At 15km/s it's kinetic energy is 1.125e13j, or to put it another way 11.25 terajoules (enough to power the whole world for two-thirds of a second). Spread out over 133.333 seconds that leads to an energy requirement of 84GW, that's around 40 nuclear power stations today.

It's easy to see with all this why these things would cost so much money. Even if the cost to launch to orbit was lowered and space manufacturing progressed were talking about systems that need to produce as much energy as a European nation just to operate. How much do you think the bill is for that?

Ok thank you for taking the time to write this up. It may well be very impractical. I agree a space catapult as you have described it would be extremely costly, expensive and would have to achieve ridiculous acceleration that would not be very good for the cargo. What did you think of the space corridor idea? I'm not sure if I was clear in describing my imagining of the whole space corridor concept but the main two distinctions from the space catapult you described are:

1. These accelerator stations are in space already, so the craft they intend to push have already exited the Earth's gravity well. I was thinking of something mild like 2G or 4G acceleration. With some very simple rail system (as in, literally, a track with a driver) perhaps they could extend a few km either side of the main mass of the relay. As the craft gains speed, the next accelerator station would add to the previous station's push in a series of diminishing returns.

2. There is not just one accelerator station. They are in series. Say tens of them near Earth for acceleration and a similar quantity on mars. This is to give some sort of simple quick explanation of how they could potentially be managed by modularising the system and thus stations can be taken offline and upgraded / replaced. New stations could be added to the line-up etc. As opposed to one huge megastructure.

As far as the cost of operating in space, yes it is incredibly expensive. 2 things I consider when glossing over such events in my script is commercial applications that require space operation and the actual technology for space operations mature.

If we use the most optimistic estimate by SpaceX, their Shotwell initiative could bring the launch costs down to $5-7million USD. That may only be to LEO but the Space Shuttle was also LEO and its average cost was $450 million per launch. SpaceX is shooting for 2 orders of magnitude by 2019.

I'm going to reply to the others in another post as I'm just on my break at work at the moment:

Cheers!
 
  • #21
Lothlorien said:
Ok thank you for taking the time to write this up.

No worries :) it's enjoyable. I hope you don't mind finding out how hard space travel is (without a magic wand of technology/economics) and that some of the alternative suggestions are useful.

Lothlorien said:
What did you think of the space corridor idea? I'm not sure if I was clear in describing my imagining of the whole space corridor concept but the main two distinctions from the space catapult you described are

Oh I see what you mean now, so the idea would be to have X number of smaller accelerators spread between Earth and Mars that each speed up/slow down traveling ships?

Unfortunately there are two major problems with that:

1) One 100km accelerator and one-hundred 1km accelerators are entirely equivalent from a basic physics standpoint. All the calculations above still apply in terms of energy, g-force etc. You're just inserting breaks in the sequence.

2) Objects don't just stay floating in place in space. Even if you strung up a perfect line of accelerators between Earth and Mars they would instantly fall out of line. Not just because the two planets are orbiting at different distances/speeds but because every accelerator is orbiting the sun at different distances/speeds. Calculating planetary alignments is quite hard (if you google it you can find some examples) and gets a lot harder the more you have. It's not just a case that Earth and Mars would have to be in the right orbits but every single accelerator would have to be too.

Lothlorien said:
As far as the cost of operating in space, yes it is incredibly expensive. 2 things I consider when glossing over such events in my script is commercial applications that require space operation and the actual technology for space operations mature.

If we use the most optimistic estimate by SpaceX, their Shotwell initiative could bring the launch costs down to $5-7million USD. That may only be to LEO but the Space Shuttle was also LEO and its average cost was $450 million per launch. SpaceX is shooting for 2 orders of magnitude by 2019.

As I said it's not just getting to orbit that's the problem, as a total cost of such a journey that that wouldn't be a majority cost. The energy cost alone of such a flight would be equivalent to a national output for a few minutes. If the cost of that was affordable then the world is a wacky place where nations can power themselves for the same cost as a "cheap" space flight.

Lothlorien said:
I'm going to reply to the others in another post as I'm just on my break at work at the moments

No worries! Just to expand on something I said in a previous post there are some technologies that would be more believable/practical for you to use:

1) Beam-powered propulsion has the same advantage as a magnetic catapult in that it removes the need for the ship to have a good drive and a lot of fuel. Even better it avoids the needs for a massive structure that uses a lot of energy in a short space of time. You could posit that stations have been built in orbit, on the moon and on asteroids nudged into helpful orbits around the system. These stations would be solar powered and use that solar energy to fire a particle beam at traveling space craft. The spacecraft would have a magnetic sail that catches the beam for thrust.

2) Ignoring the political/safety issues to slow down spacecraft could deploy a large shield and aerobrake. Essentially the craft skims the atmosphere of the planet which creates drag and slows them down so much they enter orbit of the world. Using their own propulsion system they could stabalise their orbit, raising their periapsis out of the atmosphere.

3) Orbital cyclers with some sort of space tether system could work for journeys that don't have to be very fast. Smaller spacecraft (carrying cargo or slow [cheaper] passenger) would be in orbit of the Earth and maneuver themselves to latch onto a large, rotating tether in a higher orbit. The centrifugal force throws them away from the planet on a course that intercepts a tether spun from a passing cycler. With an equal mass of inward/outward bound payloads everything stays pretty much in place. It's proposed that a Mars cycler would allow Earth-Mars travel in 5 months, though it would take nearly two years for the return journey. If I've not explained that well here's a good video on it :)

 
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  • #22
Ryan_m_b said:
No worries :) it's enjoyable. I hope you don't mind finding out how hard space travel is (without a magic wand of technology/economics) and that some of the alternative suggestions are useful.

Well yes it's quite a pickle to tacle. It's not rocket science but. Oh wait... :P
Ryan_m_b said:
Oh I see what you mean now, so the idea would be to have X number of smaller accelerators spread between Earth and Mars that each speed up/slow down traveling ships?

Unfortunately there are two major problems with that:

1) One 100km accelerator and one-hundred 1km accelerators are entirely equivalent from a basic physics standpoint. All the calculations above still apply in terms of energy, g-force etc. You're just inserting breaks in the sequence.

It still applies, yes, but the requirement to accelerate them to at least escape velocity is no longer a requirement. They already have escape velocity. This is then allowing more of the vessel to be actual useful cargo as opposed to rocket fuel, similar to gravity assist and beam propulsion you mentioned.

Ryan_m_b said:
2) Objects don't just stay floating in place in space. Even if you strung up a perfect line of accelerators between Earth and Mars they would instantly fall out of line. Not just because the two planets are orbiting at different distances/speeds but because every accelerator is orbiting the sun at different distances/speeds. Calculating planetary alignments is quite hard (if you google it you can find some examples) and gets a lot harder the more you have. It's not just a case that Earth and Mars would have to be in the right orbits but every single accelerator would have to be too.

I agree. From what I have gathered, maybe this thing could be set up to align with a gradually decaying orbit (around the sun) with all accelerators being given a distinct orbital decay so to keep the alignment for the duration of the window. Unless someone tries solving those equations to see if there actually exists orbital decay points that do maintain alignment, I'll be happy with it just being sci-fi gloss. If I pretend that there is a solution, then the by product of the orbital decay would also be that the stations would grow further apart by the end of the window. This hopes that there exists a solution between orbital decay and alignment that does not require constant adjustment. Not very good odds, so it looks like it is improbable or very costly to maintain such alignment.

Perhaps your version of space catapult is more viable! Have you thought about what such a device could do if it were in space but significantly slower / scaled down? if I have a single launcher and a receiving station on either end. At least that way you it just has to worry about the end trajectory only. With aerobreaking that does solve the issue of slowing down on the other end but then we lose the benefit of a return craft putting the opposite inertia on the station, thus if we were using such a system to launch many hundreds or thousands of craft, the net result in both directions keeps the stations from being pushed too far in the other direction without wasting too much of their own fuel.

corrider_alignment_thoughts.jpg

Ryan_m_b said:
As I said it's not just getting to orbit that's the problem, as a total cost of such a journey that that wouldn't be a majority cost. The energy cost alone of such a flight would be equivalent to a national output for a few minutes. If the cost of that was affordable then the world is a wacky place where nations can power themselves for the same cost as a "cheap" space flight.

Point well taken. I'm guessing based on the output, you are referring to the cost of powering a space catapult with that amount of energy. I'm with you, it is a ridiculous cost. I'm well resigned to having to deal with writing a fictional universe where a trip to Mars is going to take a while.

As far as cost goes, I'm not really too concerned with justifying cost in sci-fi scripts because my goal is only that at least the major aspects of the sci-fi is plausible. Over 200 billion dollars is spent every year by the US figuring out where the oil is with surveying, the building of oil rigs and oil pipelines and infrastructure. Also the fact that these setups are often in the most ridiculous places around the world. That right there shows me the tenacity of capitalism. If even 10% of the world economy were to rely on space activities, that's 8 trillion dollars a year (by 2015 standards) that would go towards space commerce.

Competition alone can produce impressive results. We went into World War II with propeller craft and anything left over from WW1. A few years later we had supersonic jets, rockets, radar and atomic bombs. 4 years for all that to happen.

I also am still amazed by the short amount of time between these 2 events: December 17, 1903 the Wright Brothers made the first powered flight. 65 years and 7 months later, Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon.

My main goal with writing a sci-fi script, apart from entertaining the audience, is to get a few of those very smart people to stop dreaming about being a doctor or lawyer or play wall street, and instead dream about space. Shields and warp drive fantasies don't cut it. The "science" in my opinion needs to be near enough and solid *enough* that the thought of "hey, that might actually work" enters their minds. That is my modest goal. I know it won't hold up to proper scientific scrutiny but as long as they are amazed and it seems plausible to the extent that they may have to crunch some numbers, get them to think about it, research it and finally dream about it. In fact, if they then go on to dream up their own solutions to such a system, then I'm hoping they tick an engineering field when they graduate high school as opposed to some other field.

Too see what I mean, the short film Wanderers is such a film. Some aspect of it is scientifically accurate. Other made-up and fantastic contraptions do occupy the film, but the scientifically accurate portion fuels people's imaginations. You just have to only skim through the youtube comments to see how deeply it affects many people. I don't see that on any star wars clip (I like star wars). Hence as long as certain aspects of the sci-fi is reasonably plausible, you get that double-take from thinkers.

Ryan_m_b said:
No worries! Just to expand on something I said in a previous post there are some technologies that would be more believable/practical for you to use:

1) Beam-powered propulsion has the same advantage as a magnetic catapult in that it removes the need for the ship to have a good drive and a lot of fuel. Even better it avoids the needs for a massive structure that uses a lot of energy in a short space of time. You could posit that stations have been built in orbit, on the moon and on asteroids nudged into helpful orbits around the system. These stations would be solar powered and use that solar energy to fire a particle beam at traveling space craft. The spacecraft would have a magnetic sail that catches the beam for thrust.

Yes I heard recently they plan to throw tiny projectiles at Alpha Centauri with this. Quite exciting. I will have to look into this more. Thanks.

Ryan_m_b said:
2) Ignoring the political/safety issues to slow down spacecraft could deploy a large shield and aerobrake. Essentially the craft skims the atmosphere of the planet which creates drag and slows them down so much they enter orbit of the world. Using their own propulsion system they could stabalise their orbit, raising their periapsis out of the atmosphere.

3) Orbital cyclers with some sort of space tether system could work for journeys that don't have to be very fast. Smaller spacecraft (carrying cargo or slow [cheaper] passenger) would be in orbit of the Earth and maneuver themselves to latch onto a large, rotating tether in a higher orbit. The centrifugal force throws them away from the planet on a course that intercepts a tether spun from a passing cycler. With an equal mass of inward/outward bound payloads everything stays pretty much in place. It's proposed that a Mars cycler would allow Earth-Mars travel in 5 months, though it would take nearly two years for the return journey. If I've not explained that well here's a good video on it :)



This is interesting. I heard of some system like this proposed to hoist things up from Earth also. Not exactly a space elevator but something that scoops down to pick up things like a rendezvous with an aircraft. I can't remember the term but it sounds very familiar.
 
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  • #23
unrelistic
Ryan_m_b said:
E = mc2First let's look at kinetic energy and force:

Ke = 1/2mv2
F = ma

That is limited to low exhaust velocities. Under relativistic conditions the specific momentum of rocket fuel is

[itex]p_{sp} = c \cdot \sqrt {d \cdot \eta \cdot \left[ {2 - d \cdot \left( {2 - \eta } \right)} \right]}[/itex]

with the mass defect d and the degree of efficiency ##\eta##. The resulting acceleration is

[itex]a = \frac{{p_{sp} \cdot \dot m}}{m}[/itex]

with the fuel consumption ##\dot m## and the total mass m of the ship. The energy conversion rate is

[itex]\dot E = d \cdot \dot m \cdot c^2[/itex]

and the waste energy production

[itex]\dot Q = \left( {1 - \eta } \right) \cdot d \cdot \dot m \cdot c^2[/itex]

For a rough estimation of future developements I would look for energy efficiency and power values of current and past rocket systems and try to extrapolate in the future. That might hopefully result in resonable numbers for fuel consumption, maximum velocities, travel times, thermal signature and other properties of rocket propulsion systems which could be useful for a not that unrealistic sci-fy script.
 
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1. How does the third law of motion apply to space drives?

The third law of motion, also known as the law of action and reaction, states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. This means that in order for a space drive to move a spacecraft forward, it must push against something in the opposite direction. This is typically achieved through the use of propellants or other forms of thrust.

2. Can we go infinitely far with space drives?

In theory, there is no limit to how far we can go with space drives. However, it ultimately depends on the technology and resources available. Currently, our space drives have limited capabilities and can only take us so far. But as technology advances, we may be able to travel much farther into space.

3. How fast can space drives take us?

The speed at which a space drive can take us depends on the type of drive and the amount of energy it can produce. Some current space drives, such as ion engines, can reach speeds of up to 90,000 mph. However, there are theoretical concepts, such as the Alcubierre drive, that could potentially allow us to travel faster than the speed of light.

4. Are there any limitations to space drives?

There are several limitations to space drives, including the amount of fuel or energy they require, the effects of gravity, and the laws of physics. For example, it takes a tremendous amount of energy to reach the speed of light, and it is currently impossible to exceed this speed due to the laws of relativity.

5. How do space drives impact space exploration?

Space drives play a crucial role in space exploration by allowing us to travel farther and faster than ever before. They also enable us to maneuver and control spacecraft, making it possible to visit and study distant planets, moons, and other celestial bodies. Without space drives, our ability to explore and understand the universe would be significantly limited.

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