New Kind of Orbit Could Ease Mars Communications 127
japan_dan writes "An interesting way to enable Earth-Mars communication when the Sun occludes the direct radio line-of-sight: ESA proposes placing a pair of continuous-thrusting relay satellites, using a solar electric propulsion system — one in front and ahead of Mars, the other behind and below — with both following non-Keplerian, so-called 'B-orbits'. This means the direction of thrust is perpendicular to the satellites' direction of flight, allowing them to 'hover' with both Earth and Mars in view. Quoting from the Q&A: 'We found that a pair of relay satellites would only have to switch on their thrusters for about 90 days out of every 2.13-year period, and this solution would only increase the one-way signal travel time by one minute, so it could be effective.'" Here is the paper describing non-Keplerian orbits (PDF).
That's good news (Score:5, Funny)
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You'd think, but the fools are assuming the extra minute of round-trip communication time isn't a problem because it doesn't seriously affect their reaction times. But they fail to understand that in the Martian language, time is a critical component of meaning! And extra minute of latency could make the difference between saying "We accept your offer of peaceful relations. We will begin transmitting cultural information immediately," and "We accept your offer of peaceful relations... Psych! We will beg
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I don't think that we should attempt communication communication with the martians at all until they contact us. From what I've read [wikipedia.org], they can grok our meaning without much trouble (partially due to psychic abilities). However, their lack of adherence to our conservative moral platforms and religious dogma may doom our relations to tragic failure...
Or their aesthetic sense. (Score:2)
An entire planet of nigh omnipotent interior decorators, and they chose "desolate, barren red rock..."
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They're interior decorators so it looks great on the inside. If they can meet up with a race of landscape designers everything will be beautiful.
Re:Or their aesthetic sense. (Score:4, Funny)
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But they fail to understand that in the Martian language, time is a critical component of meaning!
The only martins we are interested in speaking with are generally speaking English, Chinese, or Russian. So that will not be a concern.
This differs from Earth how? (Score:1, Funny)
"So will you be pulling your troops out of our city?"
"..."
"Pull your troops out or we will be forced to liberate it ourselves."
"..."
"Are you looking for a fight?"
"Yes."
"You have it then! "
"Don't worry, we will have the troop out in no time"
"No certainly not, we will withdraw peaceably"
"Wait, what!?!"
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Why the fuck would that be? Now we don't have to wait a few months to cool down before sending off an asinine reply to whatever stupid shit the Martians throw at us next. Now we can insult them with only a 11 minutes of lag. That can in no way be good for diplomatic relations.
You're a dumbass.
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Laugh, but just the fact that we're collectively trying to work out the problems of interplanetary communication now that we'll certainly have in the future (if we don't destroy ourselves) made my day.
Re:That's good news (Score:4, Funny)
As long as we don't go bombing their planet to look for water.... that's BAD for relations.
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But if they have water then they could have plants which means there could be oil. The oil is worth bombing for, so the water is too, right?
Why not simple Mercury-like orbits (Score:1)
-one of them is always visible to both Mars and Earth
-they are Kepler orbits requiring no thrust
-the gravitation pull of Mercury at 120 degress is on average 0.0000000556 that of the Sun. =SunMass/MercuryMass/sqrt(2-2cos120)
Maybe the answer is below
-to get to Mercury-like orbit requires 4.6 times more energy than to get to Mars-like orbit from the Earth. (MercuryMass/MercuryRadius-EarthMass/EarthRadius)/(MarsMass/MarsRadius-EarthM
Wouldn't it make more sense.... (Score:5, Interesting)
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sure, except that you are ~doubling the distance the signal has to travel.
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Which would be the whole reason, IIRC. You only need to get around the sun once in a great while; the rest of the time it's simple line-of-sight.
Still, if this is closer than L5 even during occlusion, by several minutes, it could be worth it. I assume "only" 90 days of rocket time every 2+ years (I presume an ion drive) is a decent, long-term solution for such a satellite.
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Not quite (Score:5, Informative)
Would it?
Mars has an aphelion (maximum distance from sun) of 250 Gm, and the Earth has an aphelion of 150 Gm. So when the sun is occluding their line of sight, they are on opposite sides of the sun and are separated by at most 400 Gm. If you had a satellite in the Earth's L4 or L5 point, then this would form a 150,350,400 Gm triangle with Mars. Thus the total signal distance would be 500 Gm. This would add 100 Gm, increasing the transit time by 5.5 minutes (from 22.2 to 27.7 minutes). Not as good as the solution presented but not twice as long.
Placing these in the Earth's orbit, rather than Mars', would have the added advantage of solving the solar occlusion problem for anything we send out into the solar system, not just for things on Mars.
Re:Not quite (Score:4, Interesting)
The original article was mentioning satellites following/leading mars. With the satellites in mars Lagrange points, the distance would be longer, though not entirely double.
What the hell, I'll bother to do the math this time, using your figures of 150 Gm and 25 Gm that would result in a maximum distance from earth the a mars Lagrange point at about 350 Gm, plus the 250 Gm to mars gives a distance of ~600 Gm vs the strait line of 400 Gm. so its a ~50% increase in time.
Of course I could get pedantic and claim I was talking about the difference in time. But that would be fudging to cover my my lazy ass failing to math.
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Placing these in the Earth's orbit, rather than Mars', would have the added advantage of solving the solar occlusion problem for anything we send out into the solar system, not just for things on Mars.
Plus putting in them in Earth's orbit keeps them closer for maintenance, refueling, etc.... Would suck to have to run out to Mars every time you need to fix a solar panel or something.
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Satellites as a rule aren't maintained or refueled, they're simply shoved somewhere where their decrepit hulks can hit anything useful. Cheaper that way oddly enough.
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I guess I was think if it is firing it's thrusters "90 days out of every 2.13-year period" that it would eventually need some refueling.
You make a good point, but I was under the impression that most of the other satellites we've sent out of Earth orbit have minimal thrusters for initial push and then rides inertia for the the bulk of its trip.
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I didn't know about L4 and L5 so looked it up:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagrangian_point [wikipedia.org]
I think any satellite requires some fuel for thrusters to correct the orbit.
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L4 and L5 are actually the most stable lagrange points. The satellites would end up basically orbiting the lagrange point itself.
Re:Wouldn't it make more sense.... (Score:4, Informative)
Minor correction: they're the *only* stable Lagrange points. (And only then if the mass ratio of the primary and secondary body is high enough.)
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...on the house outside LaGrange
Just let me know
If you want to go
To that home out on the range
They got a lot o' nice girls there...
-ZZ Top singing about outer space
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Take me up to LaGrange city
Where the girls are green
And the grass is pretty
Take me home (Oh, won't you please take me home)
-Guns'n Roses singing about Martian girls and space weed.
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Planck and Herschel circulate around L2 of Earth-Moon. It needs little (but still) fuel to correct the orbit.
L4/L5 are better ... that's where the Trojans are ;-) (L4/L5 attract matter).
But as TorKlingberg points out below, the sun will move between Mars-L4/L5 or L4/L5-Earth.
I assume you planned to use L4/L5 of Sun/Mars. TFA suggests moving out of the ecliptic plane, circulating around Mars. Maybe some oscillation/periodicity can be exploited?
Re:Wouldn't it make more sense.... (Score:4, Informative)
Doesn't matter. If the sun is between Mars-L4/5 and Earth, then Mars is visible from Earth. Likewise, if the Sun is between Earth-L4/5 and Mars, then Mars is visible from Earth.
The only case where you need these relays is if the Sun is between Mars and Earth (or close enough to a direct line to make a hash of radio communications between Mars and Earth), and in any such case, none of the L4/5 points (either Mars or Earth) will be blocked from either of the two planets.
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The idea isn't exactly new, you know. George O. Smith wrote a series of stories about a relay station in the L4 point of Venus, The Venus Equilateral series, [wikipedia.org] back in the '40s. It was a communications hub for the entire Solar System, and a hotbed of technological innovation. Great stories, still worth reading.
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You assume two redundant communication points: One on mars, and one in L4/5.
But the point is to use only one between Earth and Mars.
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You assume two redundant communication points: One on mars, and one in L4/5.
But the point is to use only one between Earth and Mars.
Actually, I don't see that mentioned anywhere as the point - the point is to reduce communication time from Mars to Earth in the worst case of occlusion by the Sun. Having only one communication point is pretty impractical (any such relay satellite, no matter what its orbit, would, if orbiting the Sun or any body orbiting the sun, have to be occluded at least once a year unless it leaves the plane of the ecliptic, which would be a pain)
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There has to be something on Mars that can transmit and receive, so the addition of one in either L4 or L5 is about the minimum you can deal with without communications blackouts.
The point of TFA is to use a complicated powered orbit to do what can be done with a satellite in a free orbit at an L4/L5 point.
The advantage of the complicated powered orbit is that it would redu
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Wouldn't the Lagrange points also be occulted by the sun, though not at the same time as the planet? Also the distance would be a lot longer, as Nadaka said above.
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I started to right the same message, but did some research first. The l4 and L5 points are 60 degrees off of the minor body's position. Therefore when Earth-Mars is out of sight, a communication satellite at this point could be used.
Re:Wouldn't it make more sense.... (Score:5, Informative)
Look up 1940's science fiction about the Venus Equilateral Relay Station by George O. Smith http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venus_Equilateral [wikipedia.org]
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Ion thrusters use only energy and atmospheric (even space isn't a perfect vacuum) particles for reaction mass. There are some nifty underwater engine prototypes that use ionic thrust to accelerate water out a (very low speed) jet.
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I was under the impression these sats were going to be a LONG way away from an atmosphere.
Besides, power supplies can and do fail.
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There is an atmosphere in space. Mostly hydrogen, some other light elements. It's just very sparse.
If the power supply fails, it's screwed no matter what the thrust mechanism is (except a light sail... but that's science fiction for now)
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Witch ever way you slice there'd be no spell when both Earth and the satellites were blocked by the Sun so it's a wizard idea.
Re:Wouldn't it make more sense.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Also, to be pedantic, you would still need some fuel on a LaGrange spacecraft for station-keeping purposes. Though this amount would be minimal, you can't justifiably claim that you wouldn't need *ANY* fuel.
Cheers Mate.
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~Your friendly RIAA rep
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I think the issue is better coverage on Mars.
As I read it, the spacecraft would be positioned so that they each cover half Mars with no overlap or gaps.
If the spacecraft were at the Legrange points, then the near/day side of Mars would have a large area that could see both spacecraft and far/night side of Mars would have a large area couldn't see either of them.
Re:Wouldn't it make more sense.... (Score:5, Informative)
The receiver/transmitter on these satellites and space probes are very small. Generally they transmit using only a few watts, and we rely on huge antennas like in the ubiquitous dishes in the Deep Space Network to gather enough of that minuscule signal to distinguish it from background noise. Going the other way, we use the same huge antennas to blast commands to these spacecraft at anywhere between 5-500 kW. By the time the signal reaches the spacecraft, it has dissipated substantially, but its original broadcast power was high enough that the spacecraft's relatively small antenna can still collect enough of it to distinguish the signal.
Putting a repeater spacecraft at the L4 or L5 points would place them a substantial distance from Mars. Consequently the repeater would need a very large antenna and large amounts of power (though not as big/much as earth-based antennas) in order to relay signals to/from a spacecraft on Mars. The idea presented in the paper is more akin to what we do right now with the two Mars Rovers and several of our Mars orbiters. The Rovers themselves have weak antennas and can't communicate directly with Earth except at low data rates. Instead, they transmit their data to the orbiters (same antenna can achieve higher bandwidth since the distance is much less), which then relay it to Earth using their much larger and more powerful antenna.
(Introduction to channel capacity [wikipedia.org] for those who may be wondering what the relationship is between data transmission speed and signal to noise ratio.)
See _Venus Equilateral_ by George O. Smith. (Score:2)
Wouldn't it make more sense ... to park such a device at L4 or L5, where you wouldn't require *ANY* fuel to keep it in position?
I'll second that.
Jupiter might perturb the Mars L4 & L5 points too much. But the Earth's points should do just fine. They'd also have somewhat more solar power available and would be closer, fuel-wise, for installation, which should help as well.
George O. Smith proposed essentially this solution in the _Venus Equilateral_ series, between 1942 and 1945. He sited his relay at
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In theory something that is placed in an L4 or L5 point stays there forever. In reality perturbations from the various objects in the Solar System shake up thing a little, so some manoeuvers are needed to keep things stable.
Who needs full-time communications (Score:5, Funny)
Houston> We haven't talked for a day, what's up?
Mars rover> Hey, I moved one meter!
Houston> No shit!
Re:Who needs full-time communications (Score:5, Funny)
Cita tion need ed (Score:2, Informative)
FYI: there is no article on Wikipedia to describe a non-Keplerian orbit.
Even 2 simple diagrams describing the 2 orbits types would help.
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Did you read the linked paper?
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By non-Keplerian, they just mean a powered orbit. An orbit that needs the satellite to fire thrusters from time to time to keep on track. Maybe to shift from gravitational trough to gravitational trough, or maybe to keep the orbit from decaying.
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Booo, that paper was arcane but interesting.
Orbital resonance, anyone? (Score:2)
Still, there may be something exotic that could be done.
Eh? (Score:3, Funny)
I understand "behind and below". WTF is "in front and ahead"?
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Yup, prolly should have been "in front and above".
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Ah. I was only thinking in terms of Mars' orbital track.
Bandwidth (Score:5, Insightful)
This is slightly tangential, but worth noting I think:
This will be handy when we can't afford to lose contact with Mars for even a few days, but there's a bigger problem lurking in inter-planetary communications: bandwidth. We don't really have enough Deep Space Network dishes (particularly, the large 70-m ones) to talk to all of our missions as much as we should. We're sacrificing data collection on billion-dollar missions on a daily basis on the grounds that we don't have enough bandwidth to get it back. When we put people or even just more missions on Mars, that'll only get worse.
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Put the comm dishes on the Moon someplace. I'd recommend a set of 3, equally spaced around the equator of the Moon, thus, it'll always have 1 dish at least looking in the right direction.
Second thought, a heavy comm laser setup, also Moon-based.
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Why would putting them on the Moon help?
And the problem isn't having dishes pointing in the right directions, it's having too *few* of them. For example, when Saturn and Mars are near conjunction in our sky, we have to choose whether to talk to Saturn or Mars with the 70-m dish.
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Immature (Score:5, Funny)
How about.... (Score:2)
...we let go of the harakiri you're supposed to commit if you ever go out of cell phone range? I mean, surely we can outfit an expedition that doesn't need 24/7 babysitting from mission control, It's not like Columbus had queen Isabella call him up every night to ask "Are you there yet? Food supply ok? Your blood sugar values are low, you should eat more."
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"Why do the Shuttle crews need to get woken up over the radio?"
Camaraderie. Tradition.
ANKOS... (Score:2, Funny)
A New Kind Of Science...er...Orbit. I wonder if Wolfram will try to take credit for this, too. Maybe there's an automata to describe it.
For those who don't RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)
To clarify - this sort of "orbital" motion (not really "orbital" since it actively powered) is hardly a new idea. What is relatively new is the fact that you have engines that permit you do do it without prohibitive fuel consumption. It's different from a hovering rocket-propelled lander (like the DC-X) only in scale. The key feature, not clear in the article, is that you are intentionally thrusting along the local vertical, in the direction of gravity, to modify its effects. That was possible and everybody knew about it since, well, Newton figured out gravity. What we haven't been able to do is to maintain it for more than the briefest periods due to excess fuel consumption.
The new part here is the Hall Current thruster, which is ~factor of 10 more efficient than traditional engines. The specific impulse of these is around 1800 seconds (lb-sec of impulse per lbm of fuel- hey I didn't invent the units, I just use them...) compared to maybe 180 for a hydrazine monopropellant thruster. These are not exactly "new" either, the Russkies have been using them for decades. Only recently has the western world begun to develop them, so it's new only in that sense. So the solution they are looking at is now looking reasonably practical, although no doubt still significantly limited by the fuel consumption.
Brett
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The specific impulse of these is around 1800 seconds (lb-sec of impulse per lbm of fuel- hey I didn't invent the units, I just use them...)
That unit doesn't make sense - force and mass don't cancel each other out, even if you happen to be crazy and give the units the same name: lb-force is not the same thing as lb-mass.
To put it another way:
N × s / Kg
See - no identical units to cancel.
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Hey, ISP is in seconds, it's an industry standard. The SI version isn't any better - kgf-sec/kg. It makes more sense when you realize it's proportional to the exhaust velocity, which is in, say, feet/second.
Brett
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>Hey, ISP is in seconds, it's an industry standard.
Might be standard, but it's still crazy. Using weight instead of mass means you have to know how much gravity it was calculated for (a figure that isn't specified anywhere in the units), and means that the value given for ISP will change depending on the gravitational force you assume is in effect.
The SI version isn't any better - kgf-sec/kg.
That isn't the SI version - there is no such SI unit as "kgf". The SI unit for force is Newtons, giving you "Newton seconds per kilogram", which makes a lot more sense since there are no hidden coefficients.
Re:For those who don't RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey, ISP is in seconds, it's an industry standard.
But it shouldn't be. N*s/kg is the correct unit for specific impulse. "Seconds" is only used by American engineers who don't understand the difference between weight and mass.
When I was a kid I was deeply interested in space, but it wasn't until years later that I understood the meaning of Isp because of the idiotic convention of designating it in seconds, rather than force*time/mass, which makes its meaning completely obvious.
If you want to turn people off an understanding of the most basic aspects of space travel, by all means go ahead and keep using seconds for Isp. But it's really time for the United States to get with the rest of the world and abandon Imperial units, although I guess as an imperial power they seem like a natural fit.
[Ok, now wondering if this'll get more "troll" or "flamebait" mods. It should probably lean toward "flamebait", as the story is true: Isp in seconds really did confuse me for years. The egregious America-bashing is, well, egregious, so probably warrants a flamebait mod. But really, what's with the Imperial units, kids?]
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Not quite. SERT [wikipedia.org]
Occult vs Occlude (Score:2)
Slightly off-topic, but I have a question for the word-geeks out there. Now, I know that technically "Occults", used the way it is in this context, is technically correct (in fact, as far as I can tell, this is the *original* meaning of the word, and the other meanings have developed off of the original meaning, later). However, given that most people probably associate the word "Occult" with mysticism, mightn't it have been better to describing the Sun blocking communication by using the word Occlude, inst
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Don't ask "word geeks", do like "word geeks", open up a fucking dictionary.
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/occult
ping (Score:1, Offtopic)
What about a Stationary Position about the Sun? (Score:2, Interesting)
First: What is the purpose of 24 hour communications? If you need SOS messaging, signal recovery, or a simple heartbeat, use the sun as the point-of-reference.
Second: A fleet of solar communications satellites could provide a solar GPS system.
Third: These satellites could use Solar Propulsion and "hover" at a fixed distance from adjacent satellites. Solar sails could serve as a foundation for power generation (focused beam) and for data reception.
Downsides: the sun is a noisy place for communications, as
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Continuous or 90 days / 2.13 years? (Score:1)
I'm confused. Isn't 90days/(2.13years*days/year) 1?
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Subject (Score:2)
a set of say, four to six, relay satellites placed at the forward and trailing Lagrange points on Venus's solar orbit and the other two placed in Earth's solar Lagrange points.
Line of site is closer to straight line and as others have pointed out it would give us pretty much unrestricted communication to any point in the solar system. There may be some tech issues with this but wouldn't this or a some variant work better than having relay sat.s in powered orbits
Venus Equilateral (Score:2)
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Since there's barely anything useful on the Moon given the cost of getting it, and there's even LESS useful on Mars
Hmmm and what about the experience in design, contruction, operation and manteinance of ships, tools, environment and crews to get there?
how are we suppose to left this rock if don't start trying to get to the nearest, not so deadly rocks around here?
Egss in a basket on something like that i hear it's called...
Re:lets wake up here (Score:5, Funny)
I agree, even 6 year-olds are doing it.
Re:lets wake up here (Score:5, Insightful)
The only reason private enterprise is able to *think about* real space travel is because they are using the ~40 years of NASA knowledge and research.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/ten-nasa-inventions.htm [howstuffworks.com]
Ok so this is really basic, but also aerogel, and a laundry list of other things.
Being on Mars is really cool, and we have learned a lot about it. But as for usefulness it tells us maybe mining Mars wouldn't be that profitable (but did we know that before). But all the stuff they used to get to Mars, that shit trickels down FAST. I mean I personally believe that SSDs on the rovers are wat put them into the main stream. They lasted in a super harsh enviroment orders of magnitude longer than they were supposed to. So keep thinking all NASA produces is cool photos.
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You speak sense, but if you come to slashdot and piss on the sci-fi nerds' fantasies of colonizing the universe within the next hundred years, you're doomed to be buried in flames. Mostly what you'll see is people terribly excited about frontier-style colonization efforts or admitting that our current space efforts make little sense but justifying them because it's good practice for our engineers. It's too early for colonization (we're not even close) and the "good practice" justification is just nonsense
Re:lets wake up here (Score:5, Insightful)
What are you doing at a nerd site? Money is the LAST thing a nerd is thinking of when (s)he thinks of space. Space is for technological and scientific advancement. Sue, there will be money made in the future, but private enterprise operates on the next fiscal quarter.
NASA is doing ot because (duh) THERE'S NO MONEY IN SPACE EXPLORATION and money is the only reason for private enterprise to even exist.
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Sure there is money for Private Enterprise in space, if T-Mobile put the satellites for communication relay think of the ROAMing rates they could charge NASA and the Martians that might ROAM onto there network!
Don't forget Astronauts could use SideKicks to communicate!
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As a nerd who absolutely thinks about money to be made in the space industry, I have to disagree. Right now, space is about exploration and science, but the money to be made when someone figures out how to mine an asteroid is enormous. And the amount of money that can be made if you put an automated multipurpose factory on the asteroid is even more (if nothing else, you can produce more mining equipement and speed up the process). It'll only take a single successful mission of that type to bootstrap us i
Illudium Phosdex shortage! (Score:2)
"I have sent for you, Dodgers, because we are facing a crisis. The world supply of Illudium Phosdex, the shaving cream atom, is alarmingly low. Now we have reason to believe that the only remaining source is on Planet X, somewhere in this area."
"And you want me to find Planet X, eh?"
"Can you do it, Dodgers?
"Indubitubly, sir, because there's no one knows his way around outer space like... Duck Dodgers, in the twenty-fourth and a half
century!"
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Since there's barely anything useful on the Moon given the cost of getting it, and there's even LESS useful on Mars
Since you know the exact chemical composition of the entirety of the moon and Mars, would you mind sharing with the rest of us?
Re:Why not above? (Score:5, Informative)
"Surely there is a stable point somewhere above the sun?"
No.
Gravity is always pulling you down, but there are places in the solar system where gravity balances out. These are called Lagrange points and space agencies use them as stable places to put spacecraft. If you're not in one of those places, you're happily going to fall on/in-to the object or end up in some sort of orbit going around the object, but you're not going to be motionless or synced up with anything.
All stable points within our solar system (L1/L5) are on the ecliptic plane iirc.
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There are other stable points in the Solar System, that require only enough fuel as it takes to get there, and that is asteroids. You land on one, no more fuel needed. Just find one or two in the right orbit and a good resonance with Earth and Mars, and you have a free ride. The only hard part is that asteroids tend to tumble through space, changing their orientation constantly. Tethers could be used to slow that rotation, making a consistant orientation.
Use Solar Propulsion instead of propellants (Score:2, Interesting)
If we're THAT CLOSE to the sun, it would be interesting to see how big a solar sail would need to be for a 364.245 day parking orbit. Use the dark side of Mercury as Network Control.