Purdue Students Building Moon Lander Rocket
tekgoblin sends words that a team of students at Purdue University are working on a project to build a rocket engine that could be used on a future Moon lander. Quoting:
"Graduate students Thomas Feldman and Andrew Rettenmaier are part of a team developing a thrust chamber for NASA's Project Morpheus, which includes research to develop new technologies for future trips to the moon, Mars or asteroids. The rocket must meet stringent design and performance specifications related to factors including efficiency, size and weight limits, thrust and the ability to dynamically throttle the rocket from 1,300-4,200 pounds of thrust, Feldman said. ... A development test chamber has been designed and is ready for testing. This heavily instrumented chamber is far bulkier than the eventual flight chamber, and data from upcoming tests will be used to refine the flight engine's design."
Boiler UP!
TekGoblin
First, you develop a poorly formed, incomplete plan. Second, you ask congress for money, promising jobs to anyone that doesn't want to give it to you. Then, you begin and after the project is half done, declare it's going to cost 4x as much as you originally thought, due to technical problems and unforeseen circumstances.
Such a waste of an education. Why aren't these kids off learning about abstinence and Intelligent Design, stuff that actually benefits mankind.
Nothing like building space craft. And the USA has plenty of launch options for stuff that doesn't come back in one piece.
judging from the videos they aren't' doing much modeling/simulation in advance and their controls guys need to take a refresher course in basic controls theory - I haven't seen such scary instability in action in a long time !
It would be easier to just use a solid rocket booster from ATK.
I suppose there are not a huge number of ways to do this but they should at least try not to make a knockoff of armadillo aerospace.
Wouldn't an air bag system make the most sense? It was very successful on Mars and the Moon is mush easier. It'd probably work for even manned missions. They got extremely lucky with the original Moon missions. That type of craft is very hard to control. It's too easy to over correct. Even if they used engines for the bulk of the descent air bags could be deployed for the final 50' to 100' of the landing. Really it's that last 100' where the danger zone is in a landing. Imagine controlling an aircraft without control surfaces? That's what you are facing with a Moon landing. It's pure jets controlling it so one tiny mistake and your landing craft is spinning out of control.
"The rocket must meet stringent design and performance specifications"
So what standards are being applied? Care to list them? Like AS9100? NASA-STD 8729.1? or NASA-STD 8739.3?
Until I see what standards they are following, I call this a boondoggle vs. a nice 1 question test for finals.
In the test chamber.
Landing on solid ground using thrusters is difficult and expensive. To save money, they should use a parachute assisted splashdown into one of the lunar seas. This is obviously a money grab, or you will find the students obtained this project through nepotism.
Parachute?? Where is the drag going to come from??? o.O
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TRW's lunar module descent engine was quite a piece of engineering. Turns out that the ability to throttle down to 10% of rated thrust is rather difficult to achieve in a biprop engine. The eventual design made some serious compromises to gain the throttleability that generations have enjoyed in lunar landing simulators - it could not run stably at all in the 65%-95% range.
I can understand wanting to reinvent the wheel for the sake of the inventing, but this was a particularly tough nut to crack and one (to my knowledge) not yet duplicated elsewhere. Note that the throttling specified for the Purdue effort is 3:1, considerably less challenging than the 10:1 available to the Apollo astronauts during landing.
Woosh?
APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?