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NASA Transportation Science Technology

NASA Releases Details of Titan Submarine Concept 119

Zothecula writes: Now that NASA has got the hang of planetary rovers, the space agency is looking at sending submarines into space around the year 2040. At the recent 2015 NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts Symposium, NASA scientists and engineers presented a study of the Titan Submarine Phase I Conceptual Design (PDF), which outlines a possible mission to Saturn's largest moon, Titan, where the unmanned submersible would explore the seas of liquid hydrocarbons at the Titanian poles.

"At its heart, the submarine would use a 1 kW radiothermal Stirling generator. This would not only provide power to propel the craft, but it would also keep the electronics from freezing. Unfortunately, Titan is so cold that it's almost a cryogenic environment, so the waste heat from the generator would cause the liquids around it to boil and this would need be taken into account when designing the sub to minimize interference. However, NASA estimates that the boat could do about one meter per second (3.6 km/h, 2.2 mph)."
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NASA Releases Details of Titan Submarine Concept

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  • by Nukenbar ( 215420 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @10:26AM (#49029107)

    At least they will all be fusion powered by then.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Or just send a 3D printer to Titan and send the files for the new technology as we invent it!

      • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @11:36AM (#49029831) Homepage

        You joke, but the ability to reconfigure spacecraft on the fly even on the smaller scale has proven itself valuable time and time again. I love how they came up with a trick after New Horizons was launched to nearly double its communication rate. It has two radio transmitters, one primary and one backup, and one dish. When they launched, it seemed obvious that only one could be used at a time - but en route someone figured out that if you have one transmit with right-handed polarization and the other with left-handed, they can both transmit at the same time, and then on Earth the two signals can be separated out. But since the spacecraft wasn't designed for enough power to use them at once (that was never supposed to be necessary), they needed to find a trick to get more power. And it's not easy, given that there's not a lot of things running when the probe is just drifting in deep space - what are you going to do, shut down your guidance computer? Well... yes, that's exactly what they came up with - when they've filled up their memory, they align the antenna, then spin up the spacecraft, shut down the guidance computer, transmit at double speed until the memory is free, then restart guidance and stop the spin so that they can resume data collection.

        While 3d printing and robotic arms for assembly is a stretch at present, the importance of having hardware flexibility is increasingly being demonstrated in space missions.

        • I find disabling power to the cargo hatch and setting the Frame Shift Drive and Interdictor modules to priority 2 solves most power issues. Especially when using Sheild cell banks and medium beam lasers.
    • by mbone ( 558574 )

      Actually, this proposal envisions being powered by a Stirling engine powered by radioisotopes (considerably more efficient than a RTG), and NASA recently canceled its support for flight tests of Stirling engines powered by radioisotopes.

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @10:33AM (#49029181) Journal
    If we are designing a submarine for use somewhere exotic and oil-rich wouldn't it make sense to save time by adding the weapons systems now? You know we'll end up needing them, and designing them in after the fact will be much more annoying and probably take longer.
    • If we are designing a submarine for use somewhere exotic and oil-rich wouldn't it make sense to save time by adding the weapons systems now? You know we'll end up needing them, and designing them in after the fact will be much more annoying and probably take longer.

      I agree. Add some weapons now. Also, it should probably be designed like a marine creature to avoid suspicion from any possible alien marine life. You know what this means, right?

      Robotic Shark with frickin' lasers!

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Truly, you're a fucking moron.
    • Liberal Senator: If this is a space mission, wouldn't this involve rockets? According to my latest Quinnipiac, 43% of my constituency now supports that trendy new anti-fire movement, and I'm up for reeleection next year. No thanks.

  • TIL: I will likely be dead before the planets of our solar system are widely investigated. The time necessary to plan and execute an interplanetary mission is daunting.

    • The time is largely spent in political wrangling and procurement. Once people figure out how to make money with space flight (and that will happen), things will go much more quickly.

      Private companies are probably going to be reluctant to invest significantly in space flight until property rights have been worked out. No point in spending billions on mining an asteroid only to have people tell you that you don't own it, on top of an already very risky operation.

      The Asteroid Redirect Mission [nasa.gov] might be the most

    • Not if we can get a few more private billionaires interested in the subject. After Anousheh Ansari will come the multitudes.

  • NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts is a way of giving relatively small amounts of money ($100,000) to outside researchers to begin to flesh out advanced ideas. One hundred K is not going to buy you a fully designed Titan submarine. So, this is a idea, but not much more, and may have little or even no resemblance to NASA thinking, NASA plans or anything that is actually done later.

  • We'll need an environmental impact study to analyze the potential negatives effect of this man-made exploration device on native species.
  • At its heart, the submarine would use a 1 kW radiothermal Stirling generator.

    In other words, an impobability drive. Beware of the whales.

  • Seems like you ought to be able to do better in terms of propulsion when you can easily vaporize the liquid you're immersed in.

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )
      I wondered about this as well: if you can create a gaseous or mixed-phase layer around the sub, you ought to be able to move through the liquid with reduced drag. You can't do this on Earth with something the size of a manned submersible - the necessary thermal flux would be insane - but I'm sure someone could make a PhD thesis out of modeling, then experimenting, with this in cryogenic liquids.
  • All these worlds
    are yours except
    Europa
    attempt no
    landing there

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Doesn't Titan have a solid crust of ice like 1 or a few kilometers thick? A submersible rover is a super cool idea, but first you have to get it to the ocean. I'm confident they can figure out how to get something to Titan, but getting it through the ice to the ocean is something else entirely. A drill seems expensive from a weight and fuel standpoint, and an explosive would have to be nuclear in size to crack it and cause all sorts of problems.

    Or am I confused; are the oceans exposed?

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      They're talking about the exposed hydrocarbon seas. They're mainly confined to the poles. The largest, Kraken Mare, is larger than the Caspian Sea, though is only believed to be about a tenth as deep. There's still some question as to whether the surfaces freezes, and if so, whether it's for how long. For any frost to float it would have to contain nitrogen bubbles. Some very small waves are believed to have been observed.

      Exactly what makes them up, their source, how they behave, etc is all quite speculati

  • On Titan the view of Saturn is edge-on to the rings as Titan is in the ring plane. So the rings of Saturn would not be visible in the sky.

    Seeing the artists get this wrong in the 2009 Star Trek movie is a bit forgiving, as they need to impress their audience. But on Gizmag?!? I would have expected better.

  • because I want to see the little fishies.
    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      How do you know that Europa's subsurface water seas aren't sterile and that Titan's subsurface water seas don't have little fishies?

      • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
        I don't know but I like to imagine it. Cynthia Phillips of SETI says when looking for life, go where the water is and there's a lot of water on Europa. When I first heard her say that, I always imagine a submarine that bores down into the ice and then goes cruising around taking pics and vids of aquatic life. Of course in real world it will take considerable effort to first land, then go through the ice, then submarine around [and a zillion other things that must be done to make it all work]. (etc. etc. etc
        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          go where the water is and there's a lot of water on Europa

          There's also a lot of water on Titan, so again, your point? Titan is one of two bodies in the solar system (the other being Europa) where there's a high degree of confidence that there's a global subsurface ocean deep enough to fully decouple the crust from the mantle / core. The subsurface tides on Titan are so strong that the whole mercury-sized moon buckles 10 meters depending on where it is in its orbit.

          So again, why the obsession with Europa and

  • I'm sure the name tickles those who obsessively play Kerbal Space Program... not that I do... or know people who do... (hides his drawings of SSTO designs).

    Cool concept. Let's hope it comes to fruition.

    Give me a ping, Vasili...

  • We could use that technology to explore the Earth's oceans and exploit, if needed, methane hydrates.

  • by Ukab the Great ( 87152 ) on Wednesday February 11, 2015 @02:00PM (#49031481)

    "Sky Of Orange".
    And sea of polyethyline.
    "Sea of polyethyline".
    In our Titan
    "In our Titan".
    Submarine
    "Submarine"

  • How should a 1kW thermal exhaust get the water boiling around a submarine in an 'infinite' big water reservoir is beyond me.

    • Imagine a red hot piece of iron from a blacksmith, and he puts it in a lake. Water boils around the iron, not the whole lake.

      Plus it's not water.

      Plus it's at a very, very low atmospheric pressure.

      • Yeah, I noticed later it is supposed to get into a hydrocarbon lake.

        Regarding your hot red iron ... the probe won't be that way :) thats the point.

    • If by any chance there are 'living creatures' of some type,
      they will be remembering this as the "Great Death" (or something equivalent.)

      A 1000w heater (the sub) in a big ocean of methane better have a Lot of surface area, if they want to avoid boiling it. :)

    • It's not water. It's mostly liquid methane.

  • Is that on the list somewhere? Because I think dealing with people and the base hostile environment of space needs to be solved before we think about putting people in a sub pointed at another ocean.
  • The pdf says: "Measurement of the trace organic components of the sea, which perhaps may exhibit prebiotic chemical evolution, will be an important objective, and a benthic sampler would acquire and analyze sediment from the seabed." Why would the seas on Titan only exhibit prebiotic chemical evolution? Titan is about the same age as Earth, surely? Would love to know more about the possibilities of evolution of life in such an alien environment.
  • "...the waste heat from the generator would cause the liquids around it to boil..."

    Because there is nothing like studying marine life by boiling it... My only question is will they equip the submersible with a garlic butter sauce or not, because without it, I don't see it being a worthwhile endeavor.

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

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