Euro-Russian Manned Space Vehicle Planned 163
drachton writes "BBC News reports that the 'European Space Agency (ESA) is proposing joining forces with Russia to develop a new vehicle for human spaceflight, the Clipper.' The head of the ESA permanent mission in Russia also told BBC that the Clipper 'is meant to service the space station and to go between Earth and an orbit around the Moon with six crew members.'"
Brain Dump on Old News (Score:5, Interesting)
1. This news is older than the hills.
2. What's with the dates? The Clipper was supposed to be in service by 2010 [newsfromrussia.com], not 2011. Originally this would have put it ahead of the CEV, but the latest projections have the CEV flying by 2008.
3. HOTOL [wikipedia.org], Skylon [wikipedia.org], Hermes [wikipedia.org]; need I say more? Russia obviously wants the money for building, not the enigineering experience of the ESA.
4. "The Clipper would allow Russia and Europe to collaborate with the Americans on lunar exploration, allowing six astronauts to orbit the Moon and to act as a back-up rescue craft, if needed." I'd be happy if we collaborated, but I think it's a bit premature considering that Russia never landed anyone on the moon. Did they get close? Maybe. The details are a bit sketchy there. There certainly seems to be a coverup involved, but considering the number of "Moon Rockets" that Russia had blow up on the pad, I wouldn't have held my breath either way.
5. You'll note that Russia is looking at a winged vehicle. Lockheed proposed a lifting body [wikipedia.org] for the CEV, but was turned down. I'm consoled, however, in that the CEV vehicle will be a small part of the future stack and very easy to replace. Even if the CEV flies capsules for the first couple of years, there's a strong liklihood that we'll go back to lifting bodies with reinforced carbon-carbon heat shielding. (For those of you who complain about carrying wings and landing gear into space, it really isn't that big of a deal. The problem with the Space Shuttle is that it's FREAKING HUGE so that it can carry satellite packages. Reduced to a more normal size for human cargo, its wings and gear wouldn't cost all that much in weight.)
6. "The Clipper also enhances the possibility of space tourism." I just love Russian zeal. Those guys are never worried about the, "Why not?" =)
7. "The development and operational side of the programme is expected to cost around 100m (£68m) euros a year." Am I the only one who thinks that price tag is a little low? Even if you expect Russia to take the brunt of the costs, you're still a billion or so Euros shy. According to this page [russianspaceweb.com], they are thinking of using the Zenit booster (now there's a hell of a ride) so I imagine that would help reduce the costs. Still...
Personally, I wish them the best of luck. If all goes well, maybe the ESA will build its own Clippers and begin flying them. Their recent Galileo system certainly suggests that Europe is finally looking to be technologically independent from the US.
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:4, Interesting)
That's not the *only* reason. Wings are also safer for the crew for a variety of reasons:
1. Fewer reverse Gs.
2. Gentle touchdown. (Apparently, Cosmonauts often receive injuries when the capsule hits the ground.)
3. The ability to control the flight.
4. Aerobraking manuvers become possible.
Of course, wings add a great deal of engineering difficulty to the design, but the US already has a great deal of experience with them.
This press release doesn't say anything about the launch vehicle. Any information?
It was in point 7, under this link [russianspaceweb.com]. Originally Russia was going to build a new "Onega" booster, but they seem to have settled on a Zenit [wikipedia.org].
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
You know what? (Score:3, Interesting)
you use lifting bodies for crosstrack (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Fewer reverse Gs.
The deceleration from a capsule landing should be in the same direction as the acceleration during launch.... but for a lifting body the directions are different... which, to me, implies more problems with reverse g's
Re:you use lifting bodies for crosstrack (Score:2)
The word is "cross-range", and yes, winged vehicles excel at this.
The deceleration from a capsule landing should be in the same direction as the acceleration during launch.... but for a lifting body the directions are different... which, to me, implies more problems with reverse g's for lifting bodies.
You might want to think about that again. In a capsule, you are going upward during ascent and downward during descent. During bo
Re:you use lifting bodies for crosstrack (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't be an ass, cross-range means the same thing as cross-track. Where I work we usually refer to it as cross-track because we also refer to along-track and out-of-plane. And yes, I do this stuff for a living.
Anway range usually means distance from the barycentre or from a tracking station. And cross-range could technically be any direction in the plane of sky.... cross-track is more specific if you think about it that way.
You might want
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:5, Informative)
I'm sure NASA would love to obtain more control over launches by reengineering a kerosine rocket like the F-1s on the Saturn V, but the fact of the matter is that we have the SRBs now and they work. (They work extremely well too! Over twice the power of the F-1 engines on the Saturn V!) It would be a waste of time for NASA to develop new hardware when they already have a solution.
I do like the fact it uses shuttle main engines for the upper stage though.
Actually, the SSMEs fire for the entire launch duration. The launch profile is very similar to the Space Shuttle, but with five SSMEs instead of three.
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Personally, I do not see what the big issue is with the solid. It actually sounds like the way to go for launching a crew, other than an extra 1-2 Gs. Safer than liquid and pretty cheap. Besides, if they were truely worried about the G's that the crew feels, they could perhasp shape the engine to deliver a mo
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
I heard news of ESA asking a a few million Euros for a study concerning kliper/clipper/whatever the spelling of the day is, but it was multiple weeks ago IIRC. I checked the article, but I found nothing new.. So why they publish it now is a mystery to me, there must be some reason though, maybe there was a press conference?
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Now, Buran's energia booster had the payload capacity for a lunar launch in its heaviest configuration. However, they'd have to bring the program back from the dead; there's not too mu
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:3, Interesting)
Indeed. That was kind of my point about the "Moon Rocket" blowing up on the pad.
Thank God they gave some other engineer a chance when they went to build the Energia. Otherwise half their crap never would have gotten off the ground. (Punctuated by the fact that half the crap that did get off the ground never got where it was going. Polyus [wikipedia.org] anyone?)
Buran's energia booster had the payload capacity for a lunar l
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:4, Informative)
They did more than "maybe" "get close" - the first probe ever to actually reach the moon was Russian (Luna 2), for example. The Russians may not actually have sent people to the moon, but they certainly have accomplished some things, too, so give credit where credit is due.
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Both the Soviets and the Americans accomplished a lot of rocketry work in that era.
But do either of them still retain the specific expertise and practical experience to do a lot? I've always sort of gotten the impression that in a lot of
When A Moon Oribt Is Not A Moon Orbit (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, there's orbiting the Moon and then there's obiting the Moon.
First, you can follow an elongated orbital path around Earth that just happens to get close enough to the Moon that it's gravity alters your path and swings you around the backside of the Moon and then towards Earth. That's the path followed by Apollo 8. The vehicle does not actually enter
Why (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm sure the answer has something to do with feeding business to Boeing, Grumman, Lockheed, etc., but there's no reason those companies couldn't contribute to the development of a United Nations Space Administration (!) group-effort manned spacecraft.
A
Re:Why (Score:2)
Re:Why (Score:2)
Three years later we landed on the moon. (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:3, Interesting)
Russia doesn't have any super-boosters left in production. Getting to the moon would require either a new super-booster design, or a LOT of very expensive staging.
Just to give you an idea of how difficult this is, the Delta-V to go from the Earth the the Moon is almost exactly the same Delta V required to get from the Earth to Mars Orbit. When you consider the difference in distance, that should give you a good idea of why many consider the moon to be a poor target. (Chart [caltech.edu])
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
And it's still true. The Zenits flying today are heavily modified from their original design to be independent rockets, not strap ons.
namely, strap on boosters, AKA as Zenith
That's "Zenit", not "Zenith". "Zenith" is the translation, but it's never referred to as such in English.
BTW, it's interesting how NASA is now pushing for the system that Russians had 15 years ago - small/robust capsule/rocket for crew transport + super heavy cargo boo
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Unless you're talking about a fusion drive with lasers.
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Re:Brain Dump on Old News (Score:2)
Microsoft Lookout! (Score:5, Funny)
Not to be confused with The Clippy (TM), which "is essentially a "people harasser" designed to deliver inane suggestions.
Re:Microsoft Lookout! (Score:5, Funny)
This is a duplicate, I think (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This is a duplicate, I think (Score:2)
I thought it was a dupe, but I couldn't find the link. Seems they used the Russian name "Kliper" in the original article rather than the Anglecized name, "Clipper".
Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direction (Score:4, Interesting)
It just seems like a great use of nuclear ability. I mean, space, nuclear reactions, the two just go so well together, like peanut butter and...and whatever else goes really well with peanut butter.
Is it still just public opinion about nuclear power? Because that's dumb.
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:4, Informative)
Add a healthy dose of Chernobyl fears and you've got a country that has no intention of pursuing nuclear propulsion.
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:2)
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:2)
Fear of Richard Feynman suing them for infringing on his patent? [educate-yourself.org]
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Feyn
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:2)
If the nuclear material remains inside the rocket, the rocket cannot get a thrust to weight ratio of 1:1. The rocket itself begins to melt before the tempuratures required to produce that kind of pressure (and therefore thrust).
If the nuclear materal exits the rocket, the thrust can be much larger, but it spews radioactive waste all over the place. Great fo
Re:Opportunity to go with a "new and clear" direct (Score:2)
Space Program Futures (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Space Program Futures (Score:4, Insightful)
Without either the US or the Russian space program honestly the ISS project would be dead right now.
I think that's why they called it the "International" Space Station.
Re:Space Program Futures (Score:3, Insightful)
MIR 2 would have been a challenge for the Russinas from a funding perspective a few years ago but thanks to soaring oil and natural g
Re:Space Program Futures (Score:2, Informative)
Russian:
Salyut1 : 175 Days in orbit
Salyut3 : 213 Days in orbit
Salyut 4: 770 Days in orbit
Salyut 5: 412 Days in Orbit
Salyut 6: 1,764 Days in orbit
Salyut 7: 3,216 Days in orbit
Mir: 5,511 Days in orbit
US:
Skylab: 2,249 Days in orbit
I can see how Russia would really need the US's help.
Re:Space Program Futures (Score:2)
-aiabx
Re:Space Program Futures (Score:2)
The real kicker is that the Russian space program has been mostly funded by the West (US & Allies) during the past decade while it has been really taking off.
You do realise that the US has been legally prevented from doing this very funding for 5 years due to the Iran Nonpoliferation Act of 2000, yet they have been launching US astronauts and resupplying the ISS for the past 2 and a half years for no funding. Indeed the Russian Space Station recently had its funding from the Russian government incr
A Few Comments (Score:4, Interesting)
2. The vehicle will be launch on top of a Russian launch vehicle.
3. The vehicle will be launched from a Russian facility.
Therefore...
4. All Russia is just looking for capital to build. They know the US can't give them money due to the non-proliferation act (with exception, possibly, for a few soyuz flights with the condition that they support Space Station).
My angle? I hate the fact that people keep trumpeteering that "The ESA is so much better than NASA" "The ESA this" "The ESA that"
-everphilski-
Which Vehicle? (Score:3, Insightful)
2. The vehicle will be launch on top of a Russian launch vehicle.
Which vehicle? I doubt if a proton is reliable enough. Since this is larger and heavier than the Soyuz it does not seem that there is a rocket in the Russian inventory that can orbit it, much less send it to the moon.
Re:Which Vehicle? (Score:3, Insightful)
Proton is plenty reliable, but it won't be ever man-rated because of poisonous fuel (geptyl).
I don't now what is required for 'man-rating'. The Space Shuttle is man-rated yet passengers have roulette wheel odds of dying horribly on any given flight. The Gemini Titan and Space Shuttle both carry Nitrogen Tetroxide, highly toxic and corrosive.
because otherwise they might, you know ... design another one, maybe?
The Russians are reputed to be practical. It is obvious they are straining financially to
Re:A Few Comments (Score:4, Informative)
Really? I could have sworn that was the Atlas V Heavy with 25000 kg to GTO. The Delta IV Heavy comes in next with 13,130 kg to GTO, leaving the Ariane 5 in third with 10,500 kg to GTO.
Russia's past experience with Buran TPS was allegedly less than stellar, with the thing returning with a lot of tiles blown off and the chassis warped from the temperatures at reentry.
*cough*Bullshit*cough* That was a rumor started on Usenet years ago. It has since been tracked down and squashed. [k26.com]
This will most likely need a new rocket,
It will use the Zenit booster.
new launch facilities
Is there something wrong with the Russian Cosmodrome?
and then you will have to put a winged vehicle on top of a rocket
<sarcasm>No!</sarcasm>
which to the best of my knowledge no one has got working yet.
You know, the Space Shuttle didn't just appear out of nowhere. The idea came from the Dynasoar [astronautix.com] program which was able to trace its roots back to the original German rocketry done during WWII. No one has yet used inline wings because of reentry problems with the vehicle, not launch problems.
Re:A Few Comments (Score:2)
"Currently the most powerful expendable launch system of the U.S.A. is the Titan IV with a thrust of approximately 17 MN, and a lift capacity of 21,700 kg to LEO and 5,800 kg to a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) (thus being much weaker than the Saturn V). The European Ariane 5 performs significantly better with the newest versions Ariane 5 ECA delivering up to 12,000 kg to GTO. The Delta 4 Heavy, which launched a dummy satellite on December 21, 2004, has a capacity of 13,100 kg to geosync
Re:A Few Comments (Score:2)
The Titan doesn't count, BTW, because it doesn't fly any more. The final launch is on Oct. 19 [wikipedia.org].
Re:A Few Comments (Score:2)
If Boeing and Lockheed Martin do merge like they want [yahoo.com], one of these rockets is most likely going to bite the dust without even getting to prove itself.
The first successful Ariane 5 ECA launch was in February 12 [spaceref.com].
Saturn V and Energia would have more payload, but neither are in production right now. So sorry to burst your bubble, but what I said was the truth. Ariane
Re:A Few Comments (Score:2)
Zenit is manufactured at Ukraine. RSC Energia, the Kliper designers, are from Russia. There is a Russian government policy not to rely on foreign suppliers of potentially hostile countries for parts with possible military uses, and this includes launch vehicles.
Is there something wrong with the Russian Cosmodrome?
The problem is not getting a piece of land to launch from. Russia has plenty of vacant spots. The problem is, since the rocket is much larger and new, you need n
The future of manned spaceflight looks interesting (Score:5, Informative)
various competitors I can think of off-hand:
* USA: Shuttle-derived system [wikipedia.org], probably with a CEV capsule on top. There's several downsides to a shuttle-derived system, but it keeps the constituencies happy and should have enough government momentum to keep on going.
* Russia and Europe: Kliper's [wikipedia.org] been searching around for financial support for a while, and it looks like they finally got at least -some- funding from Europe.
* China: various iterations of Shenzhou spacecraft [wikipedia.org]
In the private sector:
* t/Space: The (Rutan-affiliated?) company just completed a parachute drop test [wired.com] and water landing of a full-scale model of their proposed CXV space capsule. It's uncertain if they'll get more funding from NASA, but their concept seems sound and may get private investment. Oh, and their web page has some really spiffy videos [nyud.net].
* SpaceX: They've already announced their intent to compete for Bigelow's
orbital prize, and their upcoming man-rated Falcon V will be large enough to carry a Gemini-style capsule.
Now what about destinations? Besides the ISS, we've got Robert Bigelow's inflatable space station modules [wikipedia.org], which should be up and operational by 2010, with several prototype launches before then. He's planning on selling these modules to various groups and countries, so hopefully we'll have several different space stations up there.
Between Shenzhou 8 and 9 China is planning on launching a small orbital laboratory, which Shenzhou 9 will be docking with. Various members of the Chinese space program have also been visiting [aviationnow.com] Bigelow's facility, so perhaps we'll see them doing something with his modules.
The future should be interesting.
15 Freakin' Years? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or is there something else going on here I didn't spot?
Re:15 Freakin' Years? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:15 Freakin' Years? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:15 Freakin' Years? (Score:2)
Personally, I have no problem with most of the major powers in the world having the capability to do moonshots or more. I'd much prefer that over a single project which any one of them could veto or otherwise hamstring by whim or incompetence. The mo
Re:15 Freakin' Years? (Score:2)
This is part of the reason the ISS sucks so much, since the US and Russia couldn't agree on what orbit to put it in, it ended up in a bad for both orbit. Dogshed discussions are bad enough in software teams, imagine if one's national pride were riding on the issue.
competition is what drove the space race in the first pl
Re:15 Freakin' Years? (Score:2, Insightful)
The real pro
Good form. (Score:2)
Old news? (Score:2)
I blogged this back at the end of 2004 [babilim.co.uk] when the Russians first rolled the Kliper mockup out. This recent BBC story does seem really weirdly timed. I figured something "new" must have happened but I can't seem to find anything. Someone had a press conference perhaps?
Al.By 2015 China will have a freakin bus (Score:2)
Re:with DRM on-board? (Score:2)
(With apologies to Smuckers.)
Re:Great relations... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's funny how we can't keep the political trolls out of even an article like this.
Re:Great relations... (Score:2)
Re:Great relations... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Great relations... (Score:2)
Russia needs venture capital. ESA can't come up with their own manned space program. They hook up. We'll see what happens in a few years.
-everphilski-
Re:Great relations... (Score:2)
-everphilski-
Re:Great relations... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, don't make it so damn big and complicated; don't tie the engines into the main craft; and DON'T use heat tiles when carbon-carbon shielding is available!
Does that answer your question?
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm the leading edge that failed was carbon-carbon. The tiles have never caused a shuttle fatality. Also carbon-carbon is not as light as the tiles.
Bringing back the engines was a good idea and will be used again if we ever get a SSTO craft which I hope we do someday.
Big and complicated are not problems if it is reliable. A 747 is big and complicated.
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Indeed. But that wasn't a failure on the part of the carbon-carbon shield. The fragility of the shield is highly overrated. i.e. You could walk up to it with a sledgehammer and you'd have a hard time getting through. The area of failure had experienced a variety of foam hits and had never failed before. That's why NASA didn't concern themselves with it.
The real problem was the use of a side mounted orbiter as
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Actually carbon-carbon has some scary failure modes that the tiles do not. Carbon-carbon must be shielded from oxygen at high temps. If not it will actuall burn. One of the nicknames for carbon-carbon is designer coal. One of the fears was that a pin hole had developed in the coating on the leading edge and that over time the carbon-carbon had eroded. Also the use of term better is questionable. The tiles did hold up
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Regarding the rest I agree. Also, Kliper has an expendable service module.
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:3, Insightful)
Lots of lessons from the Shuttle. Lots of lessons.
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
No bucks, no Buck Rodgers. When the launch system is designed by Michael Brown, don't be surprised if the taxpayer says fuck it, let's just put a robot on Mars.
Seriously, even the Soviets weren't fucking stupid enough to use SRBs on manned launches. And if you know anything about history, you probably can figure out how much they figure a human life is worth. The fact that NASA was willing to do it makes me wonder if they're stupid
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
So I guess the idea is, the plane is able to determine the general location, but once the parachutes are deployed, it sounds like the specific location is left up to the winds to determine.
Do you know if the parachutes are deployed out the back (so that the plane lands on its nose, which seems awkward), or at the nose (landing on its thrusters???), or at the top (aerodynamics issues, flipping end over end during deployment...)?
(I'm
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Space Plane? Any new materials? (Score:2)
Re:Too divided? (Score:4, Funny)
Well, the right-wing nutties currently in charge in USA agrees. It's foretold in the Most Holy of Printed Acid-Free Paper that there will be a Second Roman Empire run by a hexor that insists on leaving His mark 666 everywhere. Bloddy spammer.
Re:Too divided? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Too divided? (Score:2)
But the EU and EC are growing, so I believe we'll see more EU+ESA projects.
So many space-socialists here demand public funding of space. "No business would take the risk!!" I disagree. With information needing to be distributed worldwide, satellites are a huge commercial industry. Satellite launches occupy a huge portion of the number of annual launches, and printed launch companies constantly try to decrease cost while increasing safety. The same is not true for NASA a
Re:Too divided? (Score:2)
Re:Too divided? (Score:2)
Unfortunately Haliburton secretly owns Hillary.Gov. Glad I invested in tin foil.
Re:"Orbiting" and "Landing" (Score:2)
Re:"Orbiting" and "Landing" (Score:2)
"500 or 1000 years you say? Why wait that long? The technology is available TODAY, so why leave it to future generations?"
I'm hedging my bets when I say 500 to 1000 years. Sure we could do it now, from a technological standpoint, but we need to quit fighting stupid wars which cost money and resources. I once had an engineering professor who gave the class the whole "when an engineer screws up, people die" speech. He is right, but he also forgot to mention that also when engineers do
Re:"Orbiting" and "Landing" (Score:2)
Re: Nuclear (Score:2, Funny)
http://nuclearspace.com/ [nuclearspace.com]