Regarding compression, the same or similar magnitudes for compression strengths are available from carbonaceous super-materials as tensile strength. Diamond can handle in excess of 10 mega-Newtons per square centimeter. These supermaterials could be ideal for confining bulk quantities of fuel in one or more large tanks making such g handling ability all the more easy
Mice have withstood over 3,800 Gs in water immersion tests with lungs filled with fluid for 15 minutes. Humans may withstand in theory, not 100 Gs but 100s of Gs using the same techniques. Read all about this interesting research in a paper published at
http://www.esa.int/gsp/ACT/doc/MAD/pub/ACT-RPR-MAD-2007-SuperAstronaut.pdfOrion's arm has a good review of chemical rockets with chemical fuels with Isp of 2,000 to 3,000 seconds and above.
See:
http://www.orionsarm.com/eg-article/493687ff373fd
Note the following:
Free H radicals based chemical rocket fuels have a maximum theoretical specific impulse of Isp = 2,130 seconds.
Consider a free H-radicals fueled rocket having a mass ratio of 1,000 such as might be accomplished using a large tank where the tank mass to fuel mass ratio is 0.0005, and where the remainder of the vehicle is crew quarters, radiation shielding, rocket engines, and life support systems.
The above spacecraft would obtain a terminal velocity of 144.34 km/s. The transit time of the spacecraft to Pluto would be about 33.9 million seconds or roughly 1.095 years or about 13 months provided the spacecraft could accelerate to this velocity in under a few days.
Such a large craft might use magnetic sail based breaking to slow to plutonian orbital velocity.
Now suppose we wanted to utilize reverse rocket thrust to slow a craft down to reach Mars. We will once again assume a mass ratio of 1,000 for the craft at the very beginning of its journey. However, for the acceleration phase of the trip, we will assume that the effective mass ratio of the craft is 10 3/2.
Consequently, the terminal velocity of the craft will be 72.17 km/s. As a result, the craft will arrive at Mars in about 9.56 days or about 1 ½ weeks. The left over fuel could be used to slow the craft down thus eliminating the need for aero-breaking.
Hydrogen is a natural element choice for fabricating chemical fuels because it is ubiquitous throughout our solar system. What can be synthesized on Earth can be synthesized elsewhere.
We will assume a fully fueled initial mass ratio of 1,000 and a tank mass to fuel mass ratio of 0.0005 for the rest the the examples given in this chapter.
Metastable helium chemical rocket fuels have a maximum theoretical specific impulse of Isp = 3,150 seconds.
The respective spacecraft would obtain a terminal velocity of 213.46 km/s. The transit time of the spacecraft to Pluto would be about 22.9 million seconds or about 0.74 years or about 8.9 months provided the spacecraft could accelerate to this velocity in under a few days.
Such a large craft might use magnetic sail based breaking to slow to plutonian orbital velocity.
G-forces as high as 65 where practiced by human volunteers without differential tissue density induced ruptures.
A hydrostatically sealed chamber would result in uniform pressure over an entire person's body for persons sub-merged in a liquid for which no air is available for additional compression. Yes, there would be differential tissue pressures based on tissue density variations but this should not matter at all. The density variations in human organic tissues such as the brain are very small and of low distance scale patterns thus making the differential forces even smaller.
There are plenty of opportunities to travel around the solar system to so position a craft to enable Oberth Maneuvers using the Sun, then Jupiter, the Saturn. Even the orbital period of Saturn is less than 30 years. Certainly, a planned system of the desired series of Oberth Maneuvers could be well planned in advanced.
Why accelerate near Jupiter and Saturn with an acceleration of only 50 meters per second squared when we can theoretically do so with an acceleration of 1,000 to 3,000 meters per second squared? Carbonaceous super-materials such as graphene are as much as 200 times the strength of steel yet having a density roughly equal to that of water.