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Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
zmatt wrote:I'm sorry but dropping nuclear bombs out the back of your spaceship to create propulsion is retarded. it's akin to dropping dynamite out the back of your car to go down the highway. Except dynamite doesn't let off dangerous levels of radiation.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
idobox wrote:zmatt wrote:I'm sorry but dropping nuclear bombs out the back of your spaceship to create propulsion is retarded. it's akin to dropping dynamite out the back of your car to go down the highway. Except dynamite doesn't let off dangerous levels of radiation.
Because, of course, burning a few thousands tons of rocket fuel mix in 4 minutes, and strapping solid fuel boosters (essential oversized fireworks) to a vehicle is not comparable at all to using explosives.
Explosions are used all the time to propel objects at great speed. It's called a gun.
Thermonuclear explosions are the most efficient propulsion method we have the technology to build, and I think only antimatter can beat it.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
zmatt wrote:bid difference between harnessing combustion in a chambers and directing it through a nozzle to create thrust and setting off a bomb beside you and using the blast to push yourself. You aren't even directing the energy, so it will go in all directions and a fair bit will be wasted going the wrong way. Now if you could make a combustion chamber that can hold in a nuclear explosion and direct it out a nozzle like a rocket, you are on to something. That still wouldn't work right because you can't keep adding nuclear reactants into the chamber liek you could in a conventional rocket motor, fission doesn't work that way.
Winter Man wrote:Couldn't you just get a little nuclear reactor as a heater, and use super heated water as propellant. Or ammonia, if you're elsewhere in the solar system.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
idobox wrote:It is possible to build directive nuclear bombs as well as building explosion chambers. We are not talking about using tsar bombas as a mean of propulsion, but bombs with yields of less than a kT. A shuttle booster burns 500kT of fuel (not TNT, but I don't have the numbers to convert) in about 110s. That's about 5kT of fuel burnt per s.
You can't easily add fuel to an ongoing nuclear reaction, but with pulsed propulsion, you don't care. You explode your fuel, wait a little bit, then send another bomb/pellet.
Winter Man wrote:Couldn't you just get a little nuclear reactor as a heater, and use super heated water as propellant. Or ammonia, if you're elsewhere in the solar system.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
bigglesworth wrote:Hmm, why are reactors so heavy? Is it a requirement for power generation?
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
zmatt wrote:Of course not, but I still think it's a highly inefficient way to do it, and there are bound to be better ways.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
idobox wrote:zmatt wrote:Of course not, but I still think it's a highly inefficient way to do it, and there are bound to be better ways.
In fact bombs are one the most efficient way to use nuclear fuel. Fat man used about 14% of its fuel, and modern designs are supposed to reach 40 to 50% (it's hard to find actual numbers), while civil reactors usually recycle their bars when 3 to 5% of the fuel has been used.
Roĝer wrote:This is not a rocket, but I think it might be an interesting solution to the problem of landing on an arbitrary planet without needing custom parts from the surface:
A portable space elevator. In some designs for an earth space elevator a heavy satellite is launched to geostationary orbit and then unrolls a cable to the surface (moving up in the process to keep the centre of mass at GO). If you could do this on Earth, why not around another planet? It might even be a lot easier because of lower gravity.
So your mothership would be rather massive, with carbon fibre/unobtainium cable taking up most of its mass in a very large cargo hold. Interplanetary travel goes by ion drive powered by your fusion/antimatter reactor, which of course also powers the life support system and winch motor. After orbit insertion a small cable fix unit is lowered at the end of the cable towards the surface, a process taking a couple of days to hours, while if necessary atmospheric decent craft go ahead to secure the area. The cable reaches the ground and is fixed by the advance team, after which cable climber cars can bring equipment and personell down and precious resources up. Also, the atmospheric decent craft can be brough up again by cable. At the end of the operation the cable is winched up again and the mothership prepares for deorbiting.
This gives you a system that can leave the surface at short notice, doesn't require any local resources and can be used multiple times. But it cannot be used on a hostile planet that has mastered atmospheric flight, or even worse, rocketry. Well, at least not without some orbital bombardment and space marine action first.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
zmatt wrote:I'm talking about using the force of the explosion to propel you. It seems to me that it is very inefficient. I would rather put my nuclear assets into nuclear thermal rockets, which we have already had work. Right now nuclear pulse "engines" (if you can call them that) have not made it past a PowerPoint. I'm not sure how you would test them either. I mean you can't do it on earth, and carrying all of this into space to test is expensive and probably wouldn't sit well with I dunno, the whole planet.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
I wonder; if there were a decent energy storage technology, whether you could have a power station based on detonating bombs...idobox wrote:In fact bombs are one the most efficient way to use nuclear fuel. Fat man used about 14% of its fuel, and modern designs are supposed to reach 40 to 50% (it's hard to find actual numbers), while civil reactors usually recycle their bars when 3 to 5% of the fuel has been used.

Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
Technical Ben wrote:What ideas do you have for a one stage space craft for launch into orbit? Lets say to the International Space Station.
ikrase wrote:What about different reentry patterns? Has anyone ever tried extremely gradual, multiple hour reentries?
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
ikrase wrote:Problem is it will slow you down a bit, then you will plunge deep into the atmosphere and vaporize.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
ikrase wrote:Problem is it will slow you down a bit, then you will plunge deep into the atmosphere and vaporize. Gradual reentries of any kind can only be done with lifting vehicles.
Could you elaborate, Kang?
ikrase wrote:Now let's consider dropping a paper airplane from orbit. (THIS WILL NOT WORK IN REAL LIFE). The paper airplane will slow down a little bit like the feather, but its lift will be high in relation to it's inertia, and will hold it up in the upper atmosphere where it won't burn up, and it can slow down gradualy and spiral in. This is a lifting reentry. A very, very unrealistic one.
Japanese scientists and origami masters hope to launch a paper airplane from space and learn from its trip back to Earth.
"It sounded like a simply impossible, crazy idea," Suzuki said. "I gave it some more thought, and came to think it may not be ridiculous after all, and could very well survive if it comes down extremely slowly."
A large spacecraft such as the Space Shuttle can reach speeds of up to Mach 20 (over 15,200 mph) when it re-enters the Earth’s atmosphere, and friction with the air heats the outer surface to extreme temperatures. The much lighter origami aircraft, which the researchers claim will come down more slowly, is not expected to burn up on re-entry.
ikrase wrote:However, it will slow down a LITTLE BIT, but still be traveling at 6 km/s.
Waffles to space = 100% pure WIN.
ikrase wrote:I see, although our nuclear powered shuttles should not need APU fuel. I think that you actually do use atmospheric surfaces during reentry. I also heard of magnetic control surfaces that might provide more surface for the weight, and not burn off.

But if landing first, could you then launch again without refuelling? It's already been done from the moon right, could we do the same from Mars?
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