tokamac wrote:
I agree with you and ask the question the other way:
Is Mars colonization conceivable with chemical rockets only?
I mean, with no nuclear power at all, no plasma thrusters. I though that electric plasma propulsion driven by enough MWe was the only way to go for inhabited interplanetary missions. Am I wrong?
are you asking the other way? I am under the impression I was saying exactly the same thing
no, I don´t think you can colonize Mars with chemical rockets. Even simple EXPLORATION missions to Mars are difficult without nuclear propulsion imho.
Musk wants to colonize Mars and he wants to see that in his lifetime. Currently I see SpaceX goal to reach ISS for NASA and sell reusable rockets as a way to get enough money to fund what truly follows, i.e. interplanetary spaceships.
I fully agree. That´s basically what I said.
Musk's interviews say that. Even Paypal seems to have been just a way to make cash so he could go on with his projects to change the world and specially colonize space.
Regarding this, shouldn't Musk have another ace in his pocket, other than VTOL chemical rockets? He must have a big plan.
maybe yes, maybe not. Maybe he wants to have, but still have not decided. Maybe he is waiting for some techs to mature, and while he waits for that, he tries to revolutionize access to LEO.
Nuclear fission is very dangerous, armful in case of an accident, adding the needed security for manned missions increases cost and weight, thus cost again… not counting the real proliferation risk.
well, I don´t fully agree, but other people here who know more about stuff like NERVA, comment on it.
I would think that JUST LIKE Musk betted on good old ROCKETS (and more than that, the old dreams of rockets that could land vertically) instead of going the spaceplane way, maybe his vision for interplanetary travel involves good old almost fully developed tech like NERVA.
So, suppose Musk thinks for "next stage" about going from chemical to nuclear fusion directly, skipping nuclear fission. Maybe he just waits for some successful powerful and compact fusion generator to emerge from all current research projects, among Polywell, Focus Fusion, General Fusion, Tri Alpha Energy, Helion Energy, MagPie z-pinch, etc…
well, fusion powerplant schemes don´t really translate all the time to fusion propulsion schemes. We just have to see the fusion PROPULSION research... some similarities, quite some differences.
Check out the one by Dr Rob Adams (google it), here is only a superficial interview with him
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tI9uQ4YJSQ
also the one by John Slough with the metal liners
http://nextbigfuture.com/2013/11/john-s ... s-his.html
this, the power source is tied to, but remains more important than the kind of thruster that could be attached to. Direct or indirect thrust, electrothermal with electromagnetic confinement like VASIMR or John Slough's fusion driven rocket, electromagnetic plasma thruster with Lorentz force acceleration… and above all that, if scientifically real and technologically practicable, a Mach-Effect thruster.
well, you know about John Slough propulsion scheme, I am not sure why you think Musk would then wait for development of land based commercial fusion reactors, instead of going directly to fusion techs specifically designed for space propulsion.