
Kind of anemic for a starfighter. Its on the order of the Space Shuttle fuel pump.
Of course it depends on the mass of the combined ship structure, payload, engines, and for the Millenium Falcon, armament. But it most likely could be made to fly. Consider this:GIThruster wrote:Lets suppose you built something like a Millenium Falcon. It's about 27 meters long, and has a thruster assembly about 20 meters wide and 2.5 meters high. If you have about 50 FF thrusters/square meter, at 10 MW@, that's about 25 GW, yes?
Will that fly?
The SSME exhaust gas velocity is about 4444 m/s, with a total exhaust stream flow rate of about 492 kg/s; thus the kinetic energy () of the exhaust stream is approximately 4.85 GJ/s which is about 76% of the energy released during the reaction of the propellants. This energy is the total enthalpy flow rate of the fluid output of the combustion chamber.
Assuming the Falcon's cooling tech is up to maxing the FFs at 25MW, that cuts the number to 500. Which is a 10x10x5 cluster - not all that massive.Aero wrote:...GIThruster wrote:Lets suppose you built something like a Millenium Falcon. It's about 27 meters long, and has a thruster assembly about 20 meters wide and 2.5 meters high. If you have about 50 FF thrusters/square meter, at 10 MW@, that's about 25 GW, yes?
Will that fly?
At that, you should have a pretty reliable engine system, 25 engines out is only a 1% power loss. IMO, better to stick a couple of Polywells in there, they should be a lot less massive than 2500 FF thrusters.
25 MW x 500 thrusters = 25 GW hmm - new math...Unless you're powering the space shuttle, then that's about right.Assuming the Falcon's cooling tech is up to maxing the FFs at 25MW, that cuts the number to 500. Which is a 10x10x5 cluster - not all that massive.
Agreed. FF thrustsers really would work best with something too small for a Poly and a Poly might fit in a light transport like the Falcon. FF is good for those craft too small for a Poly. Either way the trouble with making something fly isn't in the power density of a fusion drive. It's in the mass of the propellant, the shielding, the cap banks--mostly still though, the propellant.Aero wrote:. . .so yes, your Millenium Falcon probably could be made to fly if one wants 2500 engines. At that, you should have a pretty reliable engine system, 25 engines out is only a 1% power loss. IMO, better to stick a couple of Polywells in there, they should be a lot less massive than 2500 FF thrusters.
Not new, just error -- missed that you were working with 10MW since I'm used to thinking of the FF as a 5MW machine. So the count would be 1000, which is 10x10x10.Aero wrote:
25 MW x 500 thrusters = 25 GW hmm - new math...Unless you're powering the space shuttle, then that's about right.
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Some interesting ideas about SSTO vehicles using MHD have been floated. In combo with VASIMR that might make for a one-vehicle-does-all solution. Except for high-G space dogfights.GIThruster wrote:A better use for a FF reactor for flight would be an air breather. Suppose you were to fit an MV22 with a pair of 10MW reactor/turbofans. If you captured just half the energy and used it (which is being generous with all that air to heat) you'd have about the same power as the huge fans on the Osprey. They put out 4,590 KW each. The difference is, you don't need fuel. You feed it Boron with a teaspoon so suddenly your craft has almost unlimited range. Not a bad application.
Hard to make an educated guess. With 1,000 FF, you need 1,000 fuel injectors. Even though they're small, these things add up.Aero wrote:Check the edit to my post above. The FF thruster is so low mass that it may beat Polywell all across the envelope for flight vehicles. What is the upper limit on Polywell power based on cooling requirements, because at the low end, FF thrusters wins hands down. Polywell starts out way behind on power to mass ratio, and it may never catch up.
Have you looked at LACE? Liquify the air and separate it or not, store some for high altitude, dump the rest as liquid into the alpha stream for cooling and thrust. The best work I've ever seen comparing the various possible continuous cycles is certainly this:DeltaV wrote:Assume REB heating of propellant (QED/ARC) is used for the boost to orbit, using only air as propellant at boost start (say 70-100K ft at M2.5-3.5), transitioning smoothly to using only onboard propellant at boost end.
What is the fraction of total output power available for the REB, DPF vs. Polywell?