08-20-2021, 08:32 PM | #21 | |
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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Trying to guess about hypothetical planets/moons outside your Solar System with non-oxygen atmospheres and the biggest possiblity might be a sort of super-Mars. So needing oxygen may not be that big a limitation
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Fred Brackin |
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08-20-2021, 09:02 PM | #22 |
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Berkeley, CA
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
There isn't anywhere in the solar system that you're going to be taking off from (i.e. we're leaving out Venus and gas giants) with a gravity well anywhere near as significant as Earth. It takes about 8 km/s to reach Earth orbit, 3.6 km/s for Mars, 3 km/s for Mercury, and nothing else is above 2 km/s.
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08-21-2021, 03:34 AM | #23 | |
Join Date: Jun 2020
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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Titan would be great for an electric propeller plane and it could work in the upper atmosphere of Venus too. XKCD Interplanetary Cessna |
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08-21-2021, 04:04 AM | #24 | |
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: near London, UK
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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Seriously – because of the problems with rockets that other people have already pointed out, any spacefaring society that can use beanstalks probably should. So spacecraft that can get to orbit may be quite specialised, not your general-purpose freight and passenger haulers. That said, in GURPS Spaceships terms and avoiding speculation about real-world drives, assuming a vaguely earthlike planet, you want:
Spaceships 1 p. 37 says that there's no constraint on thrust if your vehicle has wings, so by a strict reading of the rules an antimatter pion drive will get the job done. But at 0.005G per drive I feel it would have some trouble overcoming air resistance (and even ignoring that, at the end of a 10,000 foot runway it's doing a mere 38 mph, not to mention the runway has been vaporised). Maybe you can loft it off a balloon or high-altitude carrier aircraft? But let's also say we need at least 0.1G performance. TL11 high-thrust fusion pulse drive, then, with 20mps per tank of pellets. A bit marginal? External pulsed plasma will unambiguously get the job done, and you don't even need wings. Then you're down to antimatter thermal rockets, HEDM, nuclear thermal, and chemical.
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08-21-2021, 07:41 AM | #25 |
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: traveller
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
I question whether fusion pulsed drives will even function in an atmosphere, which will interfere with the "laser beams, particle beams and/or miniscule amounts of antimatter" needed for ignition and with the control of the plasma that results.
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08-21-2021, 08:29 AM | #26 | |
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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Even Titan is a sort of "There must be something worth landing there for". The upper atmosphere of Venus might be achievable but why are you going there?
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Fred Brackin |
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08-21-2021, 02:29 PM | #27 | |
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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08-21-2021, 03:27 PM | #28 |
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Berkeley, CA
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
It wouldn't be terribly helpful. The big gain from atmospheric oxygen is that the oxygen is 89% of total fuel weight for hydrogen/oxygen and 75% for methane/oxygen. Using atmospheric methane with onboard hydrogen is only a 25% savings.
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08-21-2021, 05:42 PM | #29 | |
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Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Cambridge, UK
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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08-21-2021, 08:33 PM | #30 | |
Join Date: Aug 2007
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Re: [Spaceships] getting into orbit without superscience?
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The somewhat complicated thing I was tryintg to express was the concept of an exo-planet that did nto have an oxygen-bearing atmosphere yet was somehow practical and desirable for landing upon. The universe is probably full of planets where scramjets won't work but we won't have any reason to visit them either.
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Fred Brackin |
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