LOL, and as one might have guessed, BO is playing re-runs of marketing folks lying about mockups in their 'production' facility.
Any info on how fast these ships can travel? Our rockets currently travel around 24,000 mph is memory served. I'm just curious.nortex97 said:
Yep, it's frustrating.
Some good news though; nuclear thermal propulsion award to GA. I do believe that for nuclear thermal to advance Nasa support is needed, and General Atomics is a great partner here. BWXT I believe is the other one we discussed here a ways back (also moving forward).Quote:
General Atomics' Christina Back: Nuclear thermal propulsion "will enable spacecraft to travel immense distances quickly"
WASHINGTON The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency awarded a $22 million contract to General Atomics to design a small nuclear reactor for space propulsion, the agency announced April 9.
General Atomics, based in San Diego, California, was selected for the first phase of a program known as a DRACO, short for demonstration rocket for agile cislunar operations. The project is to demonstrate nuclear thermal propulsion or the use of a nuclear reactor to heat up rocket fuel to generate thrust.
DARPA's Tactical Technology Office in May 2020 solicited proposals in a "broad agency announcement." The goal is to test a nuclear thermal propulsion system in orbit by 2025.
Space propulsion systems in use today include electric and chemical propulsion, but other options might be needed for future exploration beyond Earth's orbit, DARPA noted. "The DRACO program intends to develop novel nuclear thermal propulsion technology. Unlike propulsion technologies in use today, NTP can achieve high thrust-to-weights similar to chemical propulsion but with two to five times the efficiency.'
The ability to monitor cislunar space the volume of space between the Earth and the moon will require a "leap-ahead in propulsion technology," said DARPA.
The DRACO program will attempt to demonstrate a nuclear thermal propulsion system on orbit. A nuclear reactor will heat propellant to extreme temperatures before expelling the hot propellant through a nozzle to produce thrust.
Christina Back, vice president of nuclear technologies and materials at General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems, said nuclear thermal propulsion is a "leap ahead of conventional propulsion technology and will enable spacecraft to travel immense distances quickly."
"Agile spacecraft are critical to maintain space domain awareness and significantly reduce transit times in the vast cislunar region," Back said in a statement to SpaceNews.
For space exploration such as human missions to Mars, Back said, "nuclear propulsion will allow for more versatility of launch windows, and enable longer stays on the planet itself."
Nobody rides the 1st stage down...RulesForTheeNotForMe said:
I want to see a G-Force graph for what that final stage burn/landing looks like. Going from 2000+ mph to 0 mph in 35 seconds cannot feel too fun.
Fatty McFat Face is going to feel like a whale is on top of him for little while. Quick napkin math shows ~3-3.5g avg for 35-40 seconds. That about right?
Oh... Well that makes more sense. Adrenaline junkies are disappointed by that revelation.Brad06ag said:Nobody rides the 1st stage down...RulesForTheeNotForMe said:
I want to see a G-Force graph for what that final stage burn/landing looks like. Going from 2000+ mph to 0 mph in 35 seconds cannot feel too fun.
Fatty McFat Face is going to feel like a whale is on top of him for little while. Quick napkin math shows ~3-3.5g avg for 35-40 seconds. That about right?
They would be in the capsule. That looks like a pretty gentle ride down.
B1061 is slated for her next crewed launch April 22nd.Quote:
For the third time ever, SpaceX has installed a Crew Dragon spacecraft scheduled to launch astronauts on the Falcon 9 rocket that'll carry it to orbit, sailing past one of the mission's last major preflight milestones.
Known as Crew-2, the NASA Commercial Crew Program (CCP) mission will be SpaceX's second operational crew ferry mission after its operational Crew-1 debut launched flawlessly on November 15th, 2020. Since November 16th, the Crew-1 Crew Dragon has been docked to the International Space Station (ISS) in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) marking at least two major firsts and won't return to Earth until Crew-2 has safely joined it at the station.
Simultaneously developed as part of the Commercial Crew Program, a raft of technical and organizational shortcomings have extensively delayed Boeing's Starliner crew capsule, effectively forcing NASA to lean on SpaceX to pick up the slack with multiple back-to-back Crew Dragon missions. Organizational excellence aside, Crew-2 is also on track to secure two of the most significant reusability achievements in SpaceX's long history of significant reusability achievements.
Mere days after a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon spacecraft lifted off with NASA astronauts aboard for the first time ever, becoming the first crewed launch in history to use a commercially-developed rocket orspacecraft, the space agency effectively gave the company permission to fly its astronauts on flight-provenversions of those same vehicles.
While those plans have effectively fallen under the radar relative to other SpaceX activities, it's not unreasonable to say that a successful Crew-2 launch with both a flight-proven Falcon 9 booster and Crew Dragon capsule would be one of the most significant technical achievements in the company's history. At the bare minimum, it will be the most symbolically significant achievement in SpaceX's history.
In essence, success would mean that SpaceX has unequivocally proven that a private company can develop from scratch methods of rocket and spacecraft reusability that are so successful and so reliable that perhaps the most risk-averse customer on Earth is willing to place the lives of its astronauts in the hands of those flight-proven spacecraft and rockets. If SpaceX can accomplish that feat with Falcon 9 and Crew Dragon, there is no practical reason to doubt that it can be repeated with Starship a vehicle that has already piqued NASA's interest.
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NASA, in a statement provided to SpaceNews April 14, said it has yet to formally authorize SpaceX to proceed on the Gateway Logistics Services contract because the agency is studying the overall schedule of the Artemis lunar exploration program, of which development and use of the Gateway is just one part.
"An agency internal Artemis review team is currently assessing the timing of various Artemis capabilities, including Gateway. The goal of this internal review is to evaluate the current Artemis program budget and timeline, and develop high-level plans that include content, schedule, and budgets for the program," the agency stated.
"The timing for the Gateway Logistics Services program's authorization to proceed will be determined following conclusion of the review," NASA added, but provided no schedule for completing the review.
A NASA procurement database shows that the agency has obligated a little more than $14 million on its Gateway Logistics Services contract with SpaceX. Most of that $12.7 million came from a pair of contract modifications in September 2020 to cover work on enhanced communications and "heavy ion environment testing" for operations in cislunar space. Those two contract modifications are the most recent actions on the contract.
Another contact modification earlier in September 2020, valued at about $680,000, was described in the database as "Requirement Change Evaluation for Gateway Logistics Services Risk Mitigation Due to delayed Authority to Proceed."
It's not clear when missions to the Gateway that require cargo delivered by SpaceX will begin. NASA now expects to launch the first two Gateway modules, the Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) and the Habitation and Logistics Outpost (HALO), on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy in 2024 under a contract awarded Feb. 9. Additional elements from international partners, including Canada, Europe and Japan, will follow.
The soonest astronauts would visit the Gateway would be the Artemis 3 mission, launching no earlier than 2024. However, Contella noted in her presentation that NASA was still studying the option of having the Orion spacecraft for Artemis 3 dock directly with the lunar lander, rather than have both Orion and the lander dock with the Gateway as planned for later Artemis missions.
Once crews start visiting the Gateway, Contella said she expected the need for one cargo resupply mission per crewed mission, which will carry supplies and equipment for the astronauts staying on the Gateway and potentially additional science payloads. "It will be able to provide quite a number of payloads. The main issue is just the amount of upmass required in general for the crewed missions," she said. "There's a lot of logistics required just for the mission itself."
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The very first Centaur we fly will be called Centaur 5. It will already have twice the propellant that Centaur 3 has. Centaur 3 (which flies on the Atlas V rocket) is 3.8 meters in diameter. The very first Centaur we fly on Vulcan will go straight to 5.4 meters in diameter. Then, what we will do in the second upgrade to Centaur is upgrade the thrust in the RL10 engines and make it even longer, to stretch the propellant tanks to give it even that much more energy. That's what takes it all the way to the Vulcan Heavy configuration.
I think they moved Vulcan to BE4 largely because Nasa wanted US engines, not russian/russian derivatives. I suppose they could fall back to the Russians but I really doubt they do. I think BO has still only delivered one 'flight ready' BE4 to ULA, and yes this is probably an ongoing problem for them as operational/production processes seem not to be worked out well.Quote:
How is the RL10 upgrade being paid for?
There's a public-private partnership RPS contract in place right now that is developing the RL10CX, which also incorporates additive manufacturing into that engine. Editor's note: The RL10 engine is manufactured by Aerojet Rocketdyne. The RL10 is exquisite. It's a Swiss watch. It's handmade. There are tiny tubes and passages. No excess beef or weight or anything on it. So being able to take that into an additively manufactured engine is a huge advantage in time, cost, and quality because once you dial those automated processes in and get them right, you're not subject to the variability of people building them.
When we first fly the basic Centaur 5, it will have an existing RL10C on it. However, the other part of going to the Vulcan Heavy configuration is that not only will the tanks be bigger, it will be powered by an additively manufactured RL10CX engine with higher thrust. This involves private investment from us and our partner, Aerojet Rocketdyne, as well as a government co-investment. They have an RPS contract now to do that work. There will be work to finish it, and integrate it into the vehicle that will be part of our LSA activity.
You didn't mention ACES, the Advanced Cryogenic Evolved Stage. Has that been deemphasized as an upper-stage option as you're trying to get Vulcan out the door?
It's just further down in the pipeline. It has always been in our roadmap after we start flying Vulcan. It still is. And now that we're into the hot-and-heavy development and fabrication and qualification of Vulcan, that's what we're talking about. But yeah, it's still on the roadmap, further out, where it always has been.
"Clever Girl"nortex97 said:
LOL.
They're quite different however, regardless of the tooling. I don't think they share any significant components, though they are integrated next to each other as well.Kenneth_2003 said:
ULA builds the Vulcan and the Atlas on the same lines with the same equipment.
double aught said:
"NEW RAPTOR WHO DIS?"