Topic: Are we go for Mars?  (Read 4692 times)

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Toasty0

  • Guest
Are we go for Mars?
« on: May 10, 2004, 12:17:20 pm »
I received this email today. I thought I would share it with you and I encourage you to follow its suggested action.

"Approved-By: steve_olejarczyk@YAHOO.COM
Date: Mon, 10 May 2004 12:36:56 -0000
Reply-To: spaceupdate@SPACE.COM
Sender: spaceupdate@SPACE.COM
From: spaceupdate@SPACE.COM
Subject: Don't Miss Your Chance to Help the Space Program
To: SPACECOM-TEXTY@LISTSERV.SPACE.COM


Dear SPACE.com reader:


For the last three months you have followed our coverage of NASA's new Vision for Space Exploration; an exciting new chapter in our nation's history that promises to reinvigorate America's commitment to space, exploring our solar system, amazing us with new scientific discoveries, and providing practical benefits for all of humanity.


The Vision calls first for the return of the Space Shuttle to flight and completion of the International Space Station. While using the orbiting outpost to learn how to operate and survive in space for extended periods, our nation's engineers will design a replacement for the shuttle under Project Constellation.


With a new Constellation-class spaceship, humans will return to the Moon and eventually reach out for Mars and beyond. At every step of the way, robotic probes will follow in the tradition of the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity, scouring the planet, unlocking its secrets, and paving the way for human exploration by searching for the best landing sites.


The stepping-stone approach NASA is adopting to execute this Vision will make it affordable. Using a "go as you pay" mindset, the space agency's budget will not have to be increased by billions of dollars.


But for this Vision to become reality, and to sustain its position on the forefront of public policy, we need your help.


We at Space Holdings, SPACE.com's parent company, have partnered with the Coalition for Space Exploration to help show our nation's leaders that we support this re-focused vision for NASA. You can show your support to by going to


http://www.space.com/goformars/


and signing the online petition.


Are you go for Mars? Tell us so right now. Don't hesitate. Our generation has a chance to do something bold in space and it can only be done if our nation's leaders see that the people support it. I hope you'll join me in signing the petition today.


And thanks again for your loyal support of SPACE.com.


Sincerely,


Dan Stone



------------------------------
Visit SPACE.com (www.space.com) for space news, information, education, and entertainment.


You have received this e-mail as a recipient of the SPACE.com Daily E-Mail Newsletter. SPACE.com and SPACE Software's Starry Night are subsidiaries of Space Holdings (www.spaceholdings.com).


To unsubscribe, visit http://www.space.com/php/email/unsubscribe.php


SPACE Holding Corp.
470 Park Avenue South, 9th Floor
New York, NY 10016 "
   

Sirgod

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #1 on: May 10, 2004, 01:38:41 pm »
Constellation class? I've got to see the concept pics on that.

Stephen

IKV Nemesis D7L

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #2 on: May 10, 2004, 06:26:36 pm »
Quote:

Constellation class? I've got to see the concept pics on that.

Stephen  




I've seen them.  They need work.  At present it involves a big rubber band and a slinky.

 

J. Carney

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2004, 06:52:43 pm »
Quote:

Constellation class? I've got to see the concept pics on that.

Stephen  




 Project Constellation writeup

A little write-up I found on the subject.

A Boing concept-art design for the Interplanetary Crew Exploration Vehicle:

 

Boing and Lockheed have different visions, of course, but Boing is the only one posting concept art for the Mars mission ship right now.  

Baker

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #4 on: May 10, 2004, 07:11:31 pm »
I would sign that petition but I don't live in the US.

Lieutenant_Q

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #5 on: May 10, 2004, 07:51:45 pm »
A few days after President Bush made his announcement, I began work on what I termed the Liberty Class Starship.  I have sketches and documentation.  If any of you are interested, after exams, I'll work on getting them up onto an accessible web page.  There are three or four main differences between my Liberty Class and Boeing's Constellation Class.

1.  Everything is enclosed in the body of the ship, the fuel tanks are not exposed to space the way they are on the Constellation.
2.  The Liberty would be armed. Preferably with Laser Cannons and Missile Launchers, but should Lasers prove to be unfeasable, a suitable alternative could be found.  The crew needs something to prevent an accidental collision with space debries.
3.  An internal Cargo bay.
4.  Can't tell if the Constellation has it or not, but the Liberty would have an Artificial Gravity Deck, creating spin gravity for a portion of the ship.  Very neccesary for crew health on a long voyage.

Perhaps the biggest difference, The Constellation looks like it might hold at most a crew of 10 (more likely 3 or 4 considering its based on the Apollo)  The Liberty would have a crew of near 60, and would be a full fledged Cruiser.

Rather than Hijack this thread, PM me if youd like me to make this stuff public.

Oh yeah, if you couldn't tell already...I'm all for Mars...lets get there ASAP.  

Kmelew

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #6 on: May 10, 2004, 09:09:17 pm »
Quote:

 The crew needs something to prevent an accidental collision with space debries.




Just as important, the crew would need some kind of radiation protection.  I couldn't imagine what would happen to an unprotected crew if they encounter solar flares like those we experienced recently!  

Lieutenant_Q

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #7 on: May 10, 2004, 09:19:49 pm »
Well I would hope that the Constellation already has something in its design to deal with radiation.  I was only looking to highlight major differences between this craft and the Liberty.  Yes Liberty would be equipped with a Magnetic Field Generator, considering how strong Earth's field is, it shouldn't be too difficult to generate a similar field, we just need to get people over the fact that this ship is going to need quite a bit of power, and the most effecient source of power in space (besides fragile solar collectors) is a nuclear reactor.  

Stormbringer

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #8 on: May 10, 2004, 09:32:43 pm »
Power supplies see post concerning new Nuclear Reactor type coupled with RTGs and new 50% efficiency solar cells.

Earth magnetic field strength: merely half a tesla ( I think). Most child's toy magnets produce more powerful fields. the charged ionosphere and atmospheric depth are what really shield earth from most radiation.

Shielding: please see my post citing and linking to a new polymer shied that is being studied which would make light wieght shielding practical.

I'm sorry to be so brief but I don't have a lot of time right now. I will join the discussion in earnest in a couple of days.

J. Carney

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #9 on: May 10, 2004, 10:29:40 pm »
Quote:

2.  The Liberty would be armed. Preferably with Laser Cannons and Missile Launchers, but should Lasers prove to be unfeasable, a suitable alternative could be found.




Laser Cannons? Who has laser cannons that can do more than 'fry' electronic components? As far as I know (and I'm kinda up on U.S. Army equipment) we have no real 'hard kill' laser weapons. If you want armaments, all you are going to get is some kind of  CONVENTIONAL  missile- and it'll be pretty hard to convince people on that one- especially all these other countries that are planning manned space missions. Nukes would be out of the question- not for any political reasons beyond the simple one of arming the ship in the first place- but simply because of cost ... those things are pretty expensive.

Enclosing the fuel tanks is a great idea- I'm all for that one. I'd much rather have even a 1/16 inch piece of alluminum between my gas tank and the dusty void than nothing at all, especially when there is a return trip involved. If you build it piece by piece outside of the atmosphere (and it looks like this one would be made that way) there is no real 'vessel weight' consideration. You'd only have to worry about one more trip, which is expensive, but not very for the extra insurance that even minimal protection from the elements would offer.

As for the crew- you couldn't feed the 60 man crew of your ship for the whole 16-month round trip mission to Mars without stocking a pantry the size of the average Wal-Mart! We definately need a larger crew than 3-4, like Appolo was ment to support, but simple restrictions on storring provisions for more than about 10-15 would make any number larger that very impractical. Even growing some food in Hydroponic gardens, you'd still lose out because it would be more space efficient to just store nonperishable food items than attempt to grow a renewable supply.

I like the idea of going big and in style; and I like the idea of sneakingly making the whole thing a fesibility study for a real-life System Defense Ship, but we need small steps. We are still new at this 'crawling outside the crib' thing... we need to take it slow or we'll bust our bottoms in a big way.  

Lieutenant_Q

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #10 on: May 10, 2004, 11:26:11 pm »
whoops...hehe...your right about the crew part...I was getting my ships mixed up. (A future Warp 1 refit of the Liberty had a crew of 60...not the original)  Permanant Crew would be 16. (she could handle up to 40 on her grav deck if need be, more if they dont mind spending most of the trip in zero-g or under acceleration gravity)

As for Weapons, sure Laser Cannons are not the hard kill type yet, but these would be one of the last things added to the ship, five years from now.  If we still don't have the hard kill lasers by then, a small naval gun is not all that hard to construct, and in some ways, could possibly work better than a Laser.  Conventional Missiles are a must, If for whatever reason a Nuke is needed (Armageddon type situation), it can be shipped up to the ship.  

J. Carney

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #11 on: May 10, 2004, 11:45:16 pm »
Just remember that nasty law of motion that says when you fire a naval gun in zero-G your ship is going to leave the firing locale at the same speed and in the oppisite direction as the shell. We'll need something without recoil- how are rail guns looking these days?  

Stormbringer

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #12 on: May 13, 2004, 01:15:05 am »
Also google the search string criteria:   "cold Plasma shields" to see an article on a more star trek like shielding schema being researched now.

Stormbringer

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #13 on: May 13, 2004, 01:47:31 am »
Laser weapons that do destroy more than circuits are a reality. The ABL is in early prototype and testing stage but is scheduled to be operational by 2007. The THEL system has destroyed Katyusha rocket volleys and FROG volleys. The Navy has it's own system it is testing. Future generations of the ABL system will be carried on the F-22. a technology has been developed for perfectly synchronizing powerful ( relatively speaking) but tiny LED lasers by the millions. The ABL system combines the output of several LASER Modules into one beam much like the Death Star's LASER in Star Wars. FEL research has resumed with a system just short of weapon strength. THat would be a LASER-particle beam hybrid.


This Laser Update brought to you by a hopeless sci and tech geek.

 

J. Carney

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #14 on: May 13, 2004, 10:48:34 am »
Cool... I'm not too much on the aircraft orstrategic weapons front. Glad our Gov't (in it's infinate wisdom) didn't close down those projects when ol' Slick Willie decided to finish killing the American military. Maybe in the near future I can forget having to carry around a -16 that hangs up when you look at it funny in a dusty room. LASERs would be far more low maintenance.

TalonClaw

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #15 on: May 13, 2004, 11:16:52 am »
Quote:

2.   The crew needs something to prevent an accidental collision with space debries.
 




Even a small meteor moving at a high velocity could pass right through the spacecraft.  Passing through a meteor or dust storm could totally incapacitate the spacecraft.  The Enterprise had a deflector dish to deal with this.  I don't think we are near that kind of technology yet.
 

Toasty0

  • Guest
Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #16 on: May 10, 2004, 12:17:20 pm »
I received this email today. I thought I would share it with you and I encourage you to follow its suggested action.

"Approved-By: steve_olejarczyk@YAHOO.COM
Date: Mon, 10 May 2004 12:36:56 -0000
Reply-To: spaceupdate@SPACE.COM
Sender: spaceupdate@SPACE.COM
From: spaceupdate@SPACE.COM
Subject: Don't Miss Your Chance to Help the Space Program
To: SPACECOM-TEXTY@LISTSERV.SPACE.COM


Dear SPACE.com reader:


For the last three months you have followed our coverage of NASA's new Vision for Space Exploration; an exciting new chapter in our nation's history that promises to reinvigorate America's commitment to space, exploring our solar system, amazing us with new scientific discoveries, and providing practical benefits for all of humanity.


The Vision calls first for the return of the Space Shuttle to flight and completion of the International Space Station. While using the orbiting outpost to learn how to operate and survive in space for extended periods, our nation's engineers will design a replacement for the shuttle under Project Constellation.


With a new Constellation-class spaceship, humans will return to the Moon and eventually reach out for Mars and beyond. At every step of the way, robotic probes will follow in the tradition of the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity, scouring the planet, unlocking its secrets, and paving the way for human exploration by searching for the best landing sites.


The stepping-stone approach NASA is adopting to execute this Vision will make it affordable. Using a "go as you pay" mindset, the space agency's budget will not have to be increased by billions of dollars.


But for this Vision to become reality, and to sustain its position on the forefront of public policy, we need your help.


We at Space Holdings, SPACE.com's parent company, have partnered with the Coalition for Space Exploration to help show our nation's leaders that we support this re-focused vision for NASA. You can show your support to by going to


http://www.space.com/goformars/


and signing the online petition.


Are you go for Mars? Tell us so right now. Don't hesitate. Our generation has a chance to do something bold in space and it can only be done if our nation's leaders see that the people support it. I hope you'll join me in signing the petition today.


And thanks again for your loyal support of SPACE.com.


Sincerely,


Dan Stone



------------------------------
Visit SPACE.com (www.space.com) for space news, information, education, and entertainment.


You have received this e-mail as a recipient of the SPACE.com Daily E-Mail Newsletter. SPACE.com and SPACE Software's Starry Night are subsidiaries of Space Holdings (www.spaceholdings.com).


To unsubscribe, visit http://www.space.com/php/email/unsubscribe.php


SPACE Holding Corp.
470 Park Avenue South, 9th Floor
New York, NY 10016 "
   

Sirgod

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #17 on: May 10, 2004, 01:38:41 pm »
Constellation class? I've got to see the concept pics on that.

Stephen

IKV Nemesis D7L

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #18 on: May 10, 2004, 06:26:36 pm »
Quote:

Constellation class? I've got to see the concept pics on that.

Stephen  




I've seen them.  They need work.  At present it involves a big rubber band and a slinky.

 

J. Carney

  • Guest
Re: Are we go for Mars?
« Reply #19 on: May 10, 2004, 06:52:43 pm »
Quote:

Constellation class? I've got to see the concept pics on that.

Stephen  




 Project Constellation writeup

A little write-up I found on the subject.

A Boing concept-art design for the Interplanetary Crew Exploration Vehicle:

 

Boing and Lockheed have different visions, of course, but Boing is the only one posting concept art for the Mars mission ship right now.