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wolram
Gold Member
Dearly Missed
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Space weather.
http://www.marstoday.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=17536
Dr Foullon points to particular concerns about the radiation dangers of Solar Proton Events (SPEs) particularly those that follow Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs - massive clouds of material ejected from the Sun that produce dangerous, high energy, charged particles). One of the largest such events ever recorded arrived at Earth in August 1972 right between NASA's Apollo 16 and 17 manned missions. Simulations of the radiation levels an astronaut inside a spacecraft would have experienced during this event found that the astronaut would have absorbed lethal doses of radiation within just 10 hours. It was simply good luck that this happened between the missions.
Propulsion
http://www.lascruces.com/~mrpbar/staifpaper.html
Several studies (Paine 1986, Cohen 1989, and Stafford 1991) [sDH1]over the past decade have identified the difficulties of sending manned missions beyond the moon. Most prominent of these are the radiation levels between .01 to .02 Sv per week from galactic cosmic rays and the substantial decalcification of bone that occurs in a zero gravity environment. In addition, psychological problems associated with living in confined quarters for long periods of time have been indicated by incidents on board the Russian space station, MIR. The effects of all of these threats can be reduced substantially by reducing the total mission time to eight to ten months. To accomplish this and maintain a reasonable mass fraction for the Initial Mass in Low Earth Orbit (IMLEO) of the ship, a high thrust system with a specific impulse greater than 2000 seconds will be required. The gas-core fission rocket is the most likely candidate to achieve this performance in the near future.
The Bush plan.
Retiring the three remaining space shuttles in 2010, after the space station is completed. NASA does not yet know how astronauts would get to the space station in the four years between retiring the shuttles and starting to use the new spaceship.
http://www.thespacereview.com/article/579/1
Putting humans on Mars will require a quantum leap in both science and industry. The technical challenges are so daunting, in fact, that many of the leading scientists responsible for getting us from here to there doubt that it is possible. “What worries me most,” says Gentry Lee, a veteran of the Apollo missions and the lead systems engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, “is that I don’t think that we're smart enough to pull it off right now.”
http://www.marstoday.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=17536
Dr Foullon points to particular concerns about the radiation dangers of Solar Proton Events (SPEs) particularly those that follow Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs - massive clouds of material ejected from the Sun that produce dangerous, high energy, charged particles). One of the largest such events ever recorded arrived at Earth in August 1972 right between NASA's Apollo 16 and 17 manned missions. Simulations of the radiation levels an astronaut inside a spacecraft would have experienced during this event found that the astronaut would have absorbed lethal doses of radiation within just 10 hours. It was simply good luck that this happened between the missions.
Propulsion
http://www.lascruces.com/~mrpbar/staifpaper.html
Several studies (Paine 1986, Cohen 1989, and Stafford 1991) [sDH1]over the past decade have identified the difficulties of sending manned missions beyond the moon. Most prominent of these are the radiation levels between .01 to .02 Sv per week from galactic cosmic rays and the substantial decalcification of bone that occurs in a zero gravity environment. In addition, psychological problems associated with living in confined quarters for long periods of time have been indicated by incidents on board the Russian space station, MIR. The effects of all of these threats can be reduced substantially by reducing the total mission time to eight to ten months. To accomplish this and maintain a reasonable mass fraction for the Initial Mass in Low Earth Orbit (IMLEO) of the ship, a high thrust system with a specific impulse greater than 2000 seconds will be required. The gas-core fission rocket is the most likely candidate to achieve this performance in the near future.
The Bush plan.
Retiring the three remaining space shuttles in 2010, after the space station is completed. NASA does not yet know how astronauts would get to the space station in the four years between retiring the shuttles and starting to use the new spaceship.
http://www.thespacereview.com/article/579/1
Putting humans on Mars will require a quantum leap in both science and industry. The technical challenges are so daunting, in fact, that many of the leading scientists responsible for getting us from here to there doubt that it is possible. “What worries me most,” says Gentry Lee, a veteran of the Apollo missions and the lead systems engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, “is that I don’t think that we're smart enough to pull it off right now.”
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