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Russia Develops Spaceship With Nuclear Engine

Matt_dk writes "The Russian Federal Space Agency Roscosmos has developed a design for a piloted spacecraft powered by a nuclear engine, the head of the agency said on Wednesday. 'The project is aimed at implementing large-scale space exploration programs,' Anatoly Perminov said at a meeting of the commission on the modernization of the Russian economy. He added that the development of Megawatt-class nuclear space power systems (MCNSPS) for manned spacecraft was crucial for Russia if the country wanted to maintain a competitive edge in the space race, including the exploration of the Moon and Mars."

4 of 297 comments (clear)

  1. Nuclear pulse propulsion by SixDimensionalArray · · Score: 5, Informative

    It would be interesting to know if the technology includes any stipulation for nuclear pulse propulsion. From the sound of it, that tech was pretty far along over 30 years ago. Space is a big place - would it not be awesome to have a new space race, MINUS the aggression, this time? Or is that simply impossible?

  2. Re:They haven't "developed" anything by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Informative

    Check out this book: http://books.google.com.au/books?id=zmpxV1ygjvsC

    One of the best collected references on the nuclear thermal rocket propulsion development program that I've ever read.. and almost all the pages are available online.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  3. Re:interesting juxtaposition by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 5, Informative

    Is this a "libertarian except for a massive taxpayer-funded space program" sort of thing?

    NASA massive?

    Social Security is massive.

    The military is massive.

    Medicare is massive.

    Welfare is massive.

    Medicaid is massive.

    The "War on Terror" is massive.

    Department of Health and Human Services isn't so massive, but it's larger than NASA's budget by a factor of four.

    Department of Education? bigger than NASA.

    Discretionary spending? yep, bigger than NASA.

    VA? You might be starting to see a pattern - yes, it's bigger than NASA.

    HUD? ditto.

    State Department and Foreign Aid? bigger than NASA.

    Department of Homeland Security? Still bigger than NASA.

    This isn't a conclusive listing of all the things in the Federal Budget that are larger than NASA. What is actually is is a list of all the things in the Federal Budget that would still be bigger than NASA if we doubled NASA's budget.

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  4. Re:The space WHAT? by jrst · · Score: 5, Informative

    Hogwash. The US may has been dicking around, but others haven't. Your comment typifies everything wrong with the typical US attitude to space exploration.

    The Russians were in space almost continuously from 1971 onwards--from Salyut, through to Mir and then the ISS--running manned missions and supply flights almost continuously until the present. The only pause in the Russian program was a couple years between the time Mir came down and the first ISS module was put up (again, the Russians).

    From 1971-present the US couldn't put a man in space for years over several periods: after Skylab; after Challenger; after Columbia. Meanwhile, the Russians continued to grind along, slowly but surely, providing both manned and unmanned supply flights. Those Progress and Soyuz flights that helped keep the ISS alive? Those were from Russia, using proficiences they developed during the 20+ years *regularly* servicing Salyut and Mir and maintaining a manned presence in space.

    Check the total time in orbit for the Salyut and Mir, days inhabited, and the number of missions--it's pretty damned impressive. And that was long before the ISS or the Shuttle.

    They weren't "dicking around". They were doing serious science on long-term manned missions, and what it takes to sustain an effort, especially from an operational/practical perspective. It's no accident that a lot of the practical ISS LS systems are based on what the Russians learned and developed. NASA has refined some of those systems, but a lot of the basic tech (air revitalization, toilets, etc.) came from the Russian program.

    This isn't a "race", at least if you're interested in more than flags and boots. It's learning. It's exploration not just of places, but of systems. It's engineering. It's figuring out how to make people and machinery work in environments that are hostile and for which many effects are little understood. You do that by trying, correcting, and trying again. That takes time and a sustained effort.