Space Tug to the Moon and Beyond
An anonymous reader writes "Andrews Space and SpaceDev, a contributor to SpaceShipOne, are building a cargo transport called SmallTug to travel to the Lunar L1 point using a Hall Thruster and running off of solar power. The final craft will be capable of attaching to and transporting satellites 85 percent of the way to the Moon for use in interplanetary missions. The launch date is scheduled for 2008 and it is being designed to be quite inexpensive. The Inquirer has more details."
Documentaries such as Enemy of the State have accurately portrayed the elaborate, byzantine network of surveillance satellites that the liberals have sent into space to spy on law-abiding Americans. Equipped with technology developed by Handgun Control, Inc., these satellites have the ability to detect firearms from hundreds of kilometers up. That's right, neighbors .. the next time you're out in the backyard exercising your Second Amendment rights, the liberals will see it! These satellites are sensitive enough to tell the difference between a Colt .45 and a .38 Special! And when they detect you with a firearm, their computers cross-reference the address to figure out your name, and then an enormous database housed at Berkeley is updated with information about you.
Of course, this all works fine during the day, but what about at night? Even the liberals can't control the rotation of the Earth to prevent nightfall from setting in (only Joshua was able to ask for that particular favor!) That's where the "moon" comes in. Powered by nuclear reactors, the "moon" is nothing more than an enormous balloon, emitting trillions of candlepower of gun-revealing light. Piloted by key members of the liberal community, the "moon" is strategically moved across the country, pointing out those who dare to make use of their God-given rights at night!
Yes, I know this probably sounds paranoid and preposterous, but consider this. Despite what the revisionist historians tell you, there is no mention of the "moon" anywhere in literature or historical documents -- anywhere -- before 1950. That is when it was initially launched. When President Josef Kennedy, at the State of the Union address, proclaimed "We choose to go to the moon", he may as well have said "We choose to go to the weather balloon." The subsequent faking of a "moon" landing on national TV was the first step in a long history of the erosion of our constitutional rights by leftists in this country. No longer can we hide from our government when the sun goes down.
$20 million is pretty darn cheap for the whole thing. I'm a little curious about the methodology for getting the thing into space. Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't this one of the teams that was competing for the X-Prize, which puts things into "space" but not into an orbital launch? Did the group adapt its developed technologies to a more rugged device that will be able to reach a large distance to the moon, or is the IPS that great at moving things into space?
Man some days I really wish I had would have pursued a degree in rocket science.
Part of me wonders why this is not known in detail already, plus wouldn't it be related to solar activity anyway? Solar wind and so forth.
They need to know though, since the trip to L1 will take 1 year.
I remember reading in New Scientist about a decade ago now that you can get to the moon using very little energy- an orbital transfer basically. Catch is, it takes 2 years to get there.
85% Why stop there? If it can get to 1.5 million km at L1 why can't it go all the way to 0.35 million km for the Moon? It seems to me that almost any spacecraft that can get to the 85% of the Moon in a finite period of time can make it all the way to the Moon.
85 = 5*17
2008 = 2*2*2*251
Ha, could they come up with a more porno sounding name?
Of course it comes as no suprise that "Andrews Space is a privately held company"
It should be noted that hall thrusters are extremely low thrust but high ISP. This is effectively an ion drive. This means that it's a relatively slow method of doing orbital transfers. In other words, don't expect this thing to drag the satellite L1 in half an hour.
Our nanosat-4 project is using a PPT although we considered an MET for a while. We have to maintain formation flight between three satellites which requires high thrust/quick burn types of thrusters. That burn time ruled out the MET.
Planetes
"One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promo Ad
"Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" - Adolf Hitl
If we can't spell correctly here, can we at least make English the primary language.
FYI:
h ighway
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interplanetary_Super
Once you are on the IPS, it's pretty easy to get where you want with very little fuel expenditures. What I'd like to know is how they plan to get there, since in order to get to the nearest IPS orbit, you probably still need amount of energy, comparable to what it takes to get into LEO. SpaceShipOne lacked the capability to get into LEO by a long shot.
Will they have to update Theodore?
I don't think I'd feel comfortable letting my children watch television shows about "Space Tugboats".
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MetaNews for real nerds, stuff that matters
Seeing as how it's from the Inquirer and all... IF it's real, I say we fire all the beurocrats at NASA and hire the SpaceOne team :) Maybe we'll even get back to the moon someday with these guys in charge. Maybe they could build us some newer, better shuttles too.
Andrews isn't, but SpaceDev is a publicly traded company.
Disclaimer: I own a few shares that I bought a little while after the SpaceShip One media blitz had died down. Scaled Composites is a private company, but SpaceDev builds their rocket engines. For me it's a long term bet - I may not win, but the sheer coolness of putting money in on this seemed like a good idea at the time.
Since I work in a completely unrelated field [entertainment], get horribly sick on a rollercoaster and would never see space willingly even if it was possible for me in my lifetime [I can get 30 minutes of me screaming, closing my eyes and being sick quite cheaply while in our atmosphere] - this is probably the only way that I can contribute to our expansion into space.
(Stocks go up and down and may become worthless and make your money explode, burn and you'll never see it again if you do anything I suggest, blah, blah, don't sue me for any of this).
How well could it interface with existing satellites? It's all well and good having a cheap and convenient space cargo ship, but it's pointless if it only attaches properly to a particular proprietary type of craft.
Ron dies in chapter 9 of book 7.
in space, there is no reduction of speed, the inertia will carry the object forward at the same speed. so, in addition to the solar panels, why not have some small and inexpensive fuel source for the start of the trip that gives a speed boost. the increase in speed will last the whole trip, unlike a car where it only lasts as long as your foot is on the gas pedal.
could a small inexpensive rocket at the start significantly cut the time of the trip?
the reason i ask, is because i am thinking this kind of tech will become valuable one day, when humans have science bases on different plantes, like mars, or even the moon. we will need supplies in a timely manner, food and such. if it takes half the time to get supplies there, that is better, isn't it?
i hope in my lifetime, ordinary people will be able to go live on colonies on far away planets. it will be like the wild west 200 years ago. it would be rough going at the start, but if a food source could be cultivated, power plants built, an atmosphere created in a controlled environment or bubble, it could be exciting. it would keep the mind busy and occupied with all sorts of challanges. i have always dreamed of living on a planet like pluto, at the last planet, having a gateway stop for explorations to far away places.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
Believe me. After that you've basically made your choices and played all your cards in life and it is next to impossible to change a career. That's why I have such sympathy for IT people whose jobs are getting outsourced these days. You young whippersnappers don't understand that re-educating oneself is not cheap and easy.
Ox might have a copywrite lawsuit. Or maybe they would settle for Ox advertising on the side of the spaceship "Brought to you by BangBro's".
Come to think of it, I am suprised Nasa has not sold naming rights yet. If Comisky Park can get 30 million to change their name to US Cellular Field, how much could NASA get to change the name of their space shuttle from Challanger to the Anhiser Bush Space Shuttle. Maybe they could even get a 30 second advertising clip of the astronauts floating in space drinking a cold refersing budwieser. Nike could be next in line, having an exclusive contract to provide all NASA shoes. It could be like what Nike did 10 years ago in college basketball when they paid 7 or 8 of the best college program universities millions of dollars to force their athletes to wear nikes as part of the uniform. When the final 4 came, all 4 universities were in contracts with Nike, and all the basketball players were wearing Nikes. Every 3 hour basketball game was free advertising for Nike, as every basketball player was wearing their shoes. Well, in space, there is only one team, and it would be lots of free advertising when they are interviewed. Maybe Kennith Cole could pay a couple million to help design the artistic look of the new space suits.
With all the different industries that could contribute money for advertising, I wonder how much NASA could get per year? 100 million dollars? 250 million dollars? If you were IBM and you were smart and wanted to keep OS/2 alive, what better advertising could you have then to have your OS used on the space shuttle, to have advertising?
Just imagine every chemist, biologist, mathematician and physicist in the USA, dressed in Nike Moonwalkers, wearing Kennith Cole Space Pleather jackets, with their IBM laptops running OS/2, and drinking a coca-cola before thier big exam or buisness meeting because it is what the astronauts drink before a critical mission.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
Sure, if you bought your house in Bumfuck, Texas you will hardly be able to attend a good college.
... hey it even rhymes, I can tell, see! I'm actually overqualified to be a lawyer, I might accidentally say something that makes sense. Oh well, back to the pool ...
Life's not all that bad here in Bumfuck, Texas, you know.
OK, so stuffing the pretty young things by the pool every evening gets a bit boring after the 500th, but hey, it's something to do.
And you don't need education to be a dumbshit manager or a lawyer moron in sue-everthing America --- you get your fee anyway, win or lose.
So don't bother with college, it's overrated. Be a dumbfuck in Bumfuck like me
Notice the article doesnt give any useful details. Solar-powered ion-thrusters have been studied since 1959 or so. They are inextricably limited to providing really teeeeensy amounts of thrust. The only big winning point is you don't need much reaction mass to throw out, as the stuff goes out really quickly. Downside is you don't have much power to work with, and you can't make more than a very tenuous cloud of ions (they repel each other).
My name's tug; can I call the ship mini-me? And... what would this be used for, exactly
Show this to your friends and family that don't know what a real hacker is
sounds like a good use for 'damaged' shuttles;
boost a new full main fuel tank, attach, and
go!
When somebody says "Space Tug", what comes to mind is a space version of the powerful little boats that haul barges around -- something compact which moves a lot of mass around.
The system, however, is called "Small Tug". It only costs $20 million becuase it's a technology demonstration. It's not meant to be practical, it's meant to show that it's principles of operation are sound and to get experience with the technologies involved. It's still a bargain, but if we could build something that would haul tons of cargo to L1 for 20 million, we'd be half way to Mars.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
re: OS/2
suggested slogan:
"Everyone knows you shouldn't open Windows in space!"
Is this tug going to be reusable? I mean, will it come back to low earth orbit after it drops off its payload to pick up more propellant and another satellite?
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NASA has looked at similar things, though none have been built yet. http://www.grc.nasa.gov/WWW/RT2001/6000/6920verhe
"Open the pod by doors, Hal" > "I'm afraid I can't do that, Dave" sudo "Open the pod bay doors, Hal" > alright
A worrying number of space systems were invented by science fiction writers...
Me (Blog)
..doesn't this suggest a major need for an orbiting cargo facility of sorts? If this and technology like it were to be become more prevalent (whether for placing satellites in lunar orbit, at the lagrange points, or simply in higher orbit) then surely it would make sense to have an orbiting queue to hold a satellite while waiting in line for the next slow tug to come back on duty. (earth-->LEO+docking@cargo-->L1,etc).
Low earth orbit and beyond are a crowded place these days, and the placement of satellites in roomier real estate seems both beneficial from an orbital stability standpoint and for staying out of the way of everything else.
filler:
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"Our interests are to see if we can't scale it up to something more exciting," he said.
If you can fall off a Lagrange point and drift into other locations, then there should be windows when you can drift from given locations back to a Lagrange point.
But yes, you do need to dig yourself out of the gravity hole we're in. Once in LEO you could spiral out with a slow efficient drive like a solar sail or ion propulsion, but LEO is the price of admission.
"Marcus Garvey". Make sure to spray the control console bright pink too.
Freedom: "I won't!"
actually, i wouldn't expect anything from NASA, or any other space agency on this planet, to present anything to the public that would floor them, until they get this 'gravity' thing under control. Once we've got that, you can expect to see insanely cool things (and practical too, for our day to day lives that is). Keep in mind, so far, we know that it exists, and that we're all subject to it. Why matter tends to do that in large clumps? So far, its only theoretical. Mass is a tricky thing. I know someone mentioned rail guns on this thread somewhere, now, i recall a few years back of an experimental launcher for shuttles and other ships, that used the same basic technology. Anyone got any info on that? I totally forgot what it's called..
Generally, you do need to "throw stuff out the back." Solar electric merely refers to the fact that solar power is used to energize particles so that they shoot out the back at a very high speed. The extra high speed they shoot out means that you can use a lot less propellant mass in order to provide a bit of forward momentum to the rest of the craft.
This link provides more details.