| Researchers push nuclear power for Mars trips
When the Soviet-built
Sputnik, the first man-made satellite, left Earth Oct. 4,
1957, it opened the door for space exploration.
(Photo courtesy of National
Air and Space Museum)
| As the
world marks the 40th anniversary Saturday of the first Sputnik
launch and the dawn of the Space Age, scientists at the University
of Florida are working on a nuclear propulsion system they say could
shorten a 600-day manned trip to Mars by more than a year.
"Two years is too long for astronauts to be in space," said Samim
Anghaie, professor of nuclear engineering and director of UF's
Innnovative Nuclear Space Power and Propulsion Institute. "Our goal
is to shorten the transit time necessary to complete a manned
mission to Mars, reducing the time the crew is exposed to cosmic
radiation."
When the Soviet-built Sputnik, the first man-made satellite, left
earth Oct. 4, 1957, it opened the door for space exploration.
Sputnik's historic, short trip into Earth orbit was a small step
compared with the giant leap of a manned flight to Mars, a
round-trip that could take 600 days aboard a chemical-fueled rocket.
Anghaie is developing fuels for a nuclear thermal propulsion
rocket to carry a manned mission more quickly into Mars orbit.
"The key to getting astronauts to Mars and back as soon as
possible lies in nuclear propulsion," said Anghaie. "Using nuclear
fuel rather than chemical fuel can shorten the round-trip to Mars
from more than 600 days to about 200 days," he said. A small reactor
about the size of a 55-gallon barrel can provide enormous power for
propulsion and carry a spacecraft at much higher speeds than can an
equivalent chemical system.
"The spacecraft would leave earth aboard a standard chemically
fueled rocket," said Anghaie, "but once it was away from the earth,
it would switch to nuclear propulsion for the trip to Mars. Nuclear
power can more than double the spacecraft's speed."
The compact, lightweight system for which Anghaie has developed a
conceptual model produces heat at more than 5,000 degrees
Fahrenheit. Hydrogen is heated in the nuclear reactor and then exits
the rocket nozzle to provide thrust.
How soon will a manned mission to Mars be feasible?
Anghaie said that the groundwork for such a mission has been
well-laid by unmanned probes of Mars. Too, an astronaut's 'giant
leap for mankind' onto Martian soil will borrow some well-rehearsed
procedures from the Apollo moon missions.
"The manned mission to Mars will use the same landing concept
that Apollo moon missions used," said Anghaie. "The craft will go
into orbit around Mars, and then a landing module will depart. When
descending to Mars, the craft will be able to use 'air braking.' It
will slow down using the friction created by the Martian atmosphere,
which is composed of almost entirely carbon dioxide."
While nuclear-powered submarines have been around for a
generation, using nuclear power for spacecraft is a promising
frontier, said Anghaie, but one not without critics.
"We have ground-tested nuclear-powered rockets since the 1970s
and have learned a great deal about high-temperature nuclear fuels,"
said Anghaie.
Anghaie dismisses critics of Cassini, an unmanned Saturn probe
mission scheduled to lift off in January with an on-board plutonium
radio-thermal generating system.
"We have significant expertise in the use of RTGs to power
satellites in space. There have been many space probes, such as
Sojourner and Galileo, that have used nuclear material to keep
equipment warm and working under the cold Martian atmosphere," said
Anghaie. "The plutonium isotopes used in these satellites do not
undergo fission, the reaction that produces power in conventional
nuclear power plants. Instead, they use the alpha particles these
isotopes emit. These particles have a very short range, so short a
piece of paper could stop them. They deposit all their energy
locally as heat, which is converted to electricity."
With the success of the unmanned Mars probes and the public
interest they've generated, Anghaie said he expects a mandate for a
manned Mars trip will crystallize soon.
For more information, contact Randy Fillmore, UF, (352)392-0186,
email: rfill@nervm.nerdc.ufl.edu.
Copyright 1997, Environmental News Network, All
Rights Reserved ENN Daily News -- October 2,
1997
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