Microflyers on Mars 17
Birds of Fire writes: "This article on Yahoo reports on work in Australia to develop tiny aircraft for Mars exploration. "Aircraft weighing as little as a chocolate bar could one day be darting over the surface of Mars with the agility of dragonflies and the eyes of bees."
Visible Mars Project (Score:4, Funny)
Re:C'mon (Score:2)
They wont fly on the moon. No air..... Seriuoslt there is loads of new tech these days that would be cheap (for nasa) to send anywhere. I am sure some neat science can be done as well
Questions? (Score:4, Interesting)
Cost is not so important, since we're willing to spend quite a bit to get these things to Mars, but even so, if the cost could be brought done enough there might be terrestrial applications for little drones loaded up with various sensors.
GPS Navigation? (Score:1, Offtopic)
RTFA! (Score:2, Informative)
Another step towards the inevitable - terraforming (Score:2, Interesting)
Eventually I would think that they are going to plan a full terraform team and such, and these can be used to map everything. Hmm, now I just gotta figure out how I can get on that team.
Pictures..... (Score:1)
NASA and Biomorphic Systems..... (Score:3, Informative)
Flying on Mars is very, very difficult. (Score:2, Informative)
So let's say your drone's stall speed is 20mph on earth? Try 200 mph on Mars. Suddenly your 12 inch model plane needs a several hundred foot runway, at the very least.
Okay now, so let's talk about turning--remember you need 200 mph of speed minimum to stay in the air.
You only get one-tenth of the air over your control surfaces, meaning one-tenth the maneuverability.
Finally, landing must be done at 200 mph for something that only needs 20mph on earth.
Tailhook, anyone?
Re:Flying on Mars is very, very difficult. (Score:1)
Re:Flying on Mars is very, very difficult. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Flying on Mars is very, very difficult. (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, the martian atmosphere is 1/60th as dense as Earths. Also, mars has about 1/3 the gravity of earth, so you only need 1/3 as much lift.
Put these all together and you need to fly about 4.5x as fast.
Since drag is also proportional to density*velocity^2, drag is 1/3. At 4.5x the speed, you need about 1.5x the power to fly on earth. Not a big difference. The good news is that you get places a lot faster.
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Re:Flying on Mars is very, very difficult. (Score:1)
Couldn't you "fly" by expelling particles (like a rocket or an ion engine) rather than wing surfaces? In that case, the weaker Martian gravity would make it easier than earth.
Flying on Mars - in silico (Score:1)