- #36
sanman
- 745
- 24
Well, let's assume that your chemically-driven lower-stage gets you to escape velocity. Then your nuclear-powered upper stage has all the time it needs to push you higher - even out to the Moon.
Accelerator size (or mass) is an engineering problem - there is no fundamental rule saying that an accelerator has to be of high mass. I would think that the closer the reactor's sub-critical state is to criticality, then the less accelerator input is required to sustain the reaction. So perhaps this could be traded off against accelerator size and power.
As for separation distance between thermoelectric materials and neutron source, well, most rocket designs are pretty long, including even many deep space concept designs, and in space you have a lot of room for separation.
If your vehicle was a lunar shuttle/ferry only operating between the lunar surface and lunar orbit, you'd still essentially be operating in a hard vacuum so that an aerodynamic geometry would not be needed.
While neutrons are electrically neutral, they are still magnetic, and so I've always wondered if it's possible to harvest their kinetic energy via a magnetic field. This would also be beneficial from a radiation standpoint. Maybe a hybrid fission-fusion reactor could do this, exploiting a tokamak's magnetic field.
Accelerator size (or mass) is an engineering problem - there is no fundamental rule saying that an accelerator has to be of high mass. I would think that the closer the reactor's sub-critical state is to criticality, then the less accelerator input is required to sustain the reaction. So perhaps this could be traded off against accelerator size and power.
As for separation distance between thermoelectric materials and neutron source, well, most rocket designs are pretty long, including even many deep space concept designs, and in space you have a lot of room for separation.
If your vehicle was a lunar shuttle/ferry only operating between the lunar surface and lunar orbit, you'd still essentially be operating in a hard vacuum so that an aerodynamic geometry would not be needed.
While neutrons are electrically neutral, they are still magnetic, and so I've always wondered if it's possible to harvest their kinetic energy via a magnetic field. This would also be beneficial from a radiation standpoint. Maybe a hybrid fission-fusion reactor could do this, exploiting a tokamak's magnetic field.