Prom... pushing the boundries is what I'm suggesting. Notice WHY I was suggesting getting them there faster. I was saying we use the time we gain to have them WORK and BUILD. Within a few years, even with only a few manned trips to the moon a year, we'd have some real BUILDINGS on the moon... stuff that's at least as good as what we have in Antarctica!
I dont see how that follows, I really don't... We're not talking about some car crazy jaunt round Brands Hatch here... It's not about breaking speed records... Hell, the small amount of food, water and LiOH you need to last a few men three days is insignificant compared to massive quantity of fuel you'd need for your breaking maneuver the way you're looking at doing it...
Prom... I'm not 100% up to speed on this, but I don't think I'm too far off:
Getting them there FAST shouldn't present a problem with breaking.I mean, you are getting rid of most of the mass when the last stage seperates. The high speed SAVES mass, making the amount that you are actually having to stop less than Apollo, just moving faster. Now, the lander is alread in orbit waiting. That's right... the HEAVY stuff DID go in slow, and it didn't need to have a huge engine to break it.
In short, send the astronauts there in a raceboat, and have most of the mass waiting, already shipped their by a freighter.
The craft getting the astronauts there in 9 hours is just 2 things- life support and enough engine to slow a light, small craft for a docking maneuver. Since the mass being stopped is a fraction of the mass that had to moved to begin with, the rocket engine (which still hasn't wasted a drop of fuel) can be a lot smaller and lighter. Plus, every second it bursn makes the craft it's stopping LIGHTER, so it's stopping power increases as it burns.
Hell, Maybe they take a day instaed of 9 hours... they still have a LOT more time to work, and a lot more power left for the return trip.
Like I said... I don't know the physics, and I'm never going to... but there are people that DO know the physics that can make it happen if someone is willing to try it. I also know that since you hae neither astrophysics degree nor work for a space agence... well, you're still no more qualified than me to say "good idea" or "bad idea".