Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Space United States

The US Government is Taking a Serious Step Toward Space-Based Nuclear Propulsion (arstechnica.com) 80

Four years from now, if all goes well, a nuclear-powered rocket engine will launch into space for the first time. The rocket itself will be conventional, but the payload boosted into orbit will be a different matter. From a report: NASA announced Wednesday that it is partnering with the US Department of Defense to launch a nuclear-powered rocket engine into space as early as 2027. The US space agency will invest about $300 million in the project to develop a next-generation propulsion system for in-space transportation. "NASA is looking to go to Mars with this system," said Anthony Calomino, an engineer at NASA who is leading the agency's space nuclear propulsion technology program. "And this test is really going to give us that foundation."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

The US Government is Taking a Serious Step Toward Space-Based Nuclear Propulsion

Comments Filter:
  • Did they give up on reverse engineering the UFOs they recovered that bend space-time as a propulsion method?

    --
    Who is the real owner of the White House crack bag?

  • ...especially with lock mart under contract...
  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @12:06PM (#63718624)

    Is this an Orion type thing (propelled by nuclear explosions) or just a nuke heated conventional propellant (like water or ammonia or 'single-H' [see RAH books]

    • ...you should read the story at ars - nuke heated hydrogen fuel...
      • you should read the story at ars

        [*snicker*] You must be new. :-)

        But noting (a) that I actually did read TFA (sigh).

        nuke heated hydrogen fuel

        and (b) Editors should have included that in TFS.

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          "I actually did read TFA"

          A formal procedure to revoke your Slashdot participation card has been initiated. If I were you I'd be seriously alarmed for the next couple decades while they consider adding a digit to your UID.

        • by hawk ( 1151 )

          >and (b) Editors should have included that in TFS.

          [*snicker*] You must be new. :-) :)

          hawk

      • by quenda ( 644621 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @06:23PM (#63719824)

        ...you should read the story at ars - nuke heated hydrogen fuel...

        Interestingly, the hydrogen propellant is the key part of these nuclear rockets.
        They go faster not because nuclear is more powerful, but because the exhaust (hydrogen) is so much lighter.
        At the same temperature, a lighter gas moves faster, thus giving a bigger push per kg of propellant. (specific impulse).

        Cryogenic hydrogen is bulky and hard to store for long periods, so I had wondered if a nuclear rocket could fill its tanks with water, and blast steam out the back, as the space shuttle and other hydolox rockets do. That can be found on Mars or the lunar poles.
        But it turns out that a nuclear-water rocket is slower than a chemical rocket, due to temperature limits. Hydrogen exhaust is the only thing that makes them viable.
        (if I understand correctly? And not to be confused with a nuclear salt-water rocket.)

    • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @12:37PM (#63718760)

      The latter. We know it works, see NERVA. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] President Nixon cancelled it only because he wanted revenge on Senators Marget Chase Smith and Clinton Anderson.

  • I forget, is nuclear the first or second age in Starships Unlimited?

  • Based upon the comments so far, wondering if this is reddit. But I think NASA should have went this way years ago. I wonder with this, if they could get a working craft with plenty of power out to say the ort cloud ?
    • If we could get to the Oort Cloud, then we could easily mine the asteroid belt... Which would be very handy, though I believe I am a bit old to take on life as a Belter, I'd like to give it a try!
    • It's better than a chemical rocket, but not infinitely so. It would still be a very long trip.

      • Nukes don't change the basic facts of space propulsion. There's no way to get delta-v other than tossing reaction mass out the vehicle. Nuclear power may make the reaction mass more efficient, but you still can only carry a finite amount and even with nuclear power you run out all too quickly if you try to do things in a hurry.

        • by sfcat ( 872532 )
          Its the hydrogen that this design would run out of first. And considering you are replacing the O2 tank with Uranium which has something like 100,000x as much energy per unit mass, it might make some difference. But the hydrogen will be the limiting factor and you can't scale that up enough to take advantage of the crazy energy density of the Uranium.
        • Google Bussard ramjet.

          • Wasn't the Bussard ramjet rejected as feasible, in part because of the technology requirements of producing the EM field, and in part because free hydrogen densities are lower than thought at the time.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              For one to collect useful amounts of hydrogen, it would have to have an incredibly strong magnetic field. Even if the technology to create such a field existed and didn't consume more energy than it collected, it would be extremely hazardous to the crew.

              I seem to recall Larry Niven had them in some of his Known Space novels, and the magnetic field was a constant hazard. The Star Trek ones are even more hand-wavy.

        • eh? loop of wire can make propulsion from solar wind. solar sails are a thing too. Shining laser out back can make propulsion too, 300 MW beam gives 1 newton of thrust.

          Have to toss mass my ass...

    • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

      They stop doing this because things we try to send to space blow up from time-to-time and if a craft with this sort of rocket on it blew up it would basically be a dirty bomb. I'm in Texas so as long as they continue to launch these in FL I feel pretty good about it.

      • no, reactor before first time going critical isn't any kind of dirty bomb. You have irrational nooquoolar phobia.

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          The fuel is radioactive,

          radioactive material + explosion to spread it around = dirty bomb.

          • The fuel is radioactive,

            The fuel is uranium.

            radioactive material + explosion to spread it around = dirty bomb.

            Uranium is a naturally occurring element. It is radioactive but minimally so. Spread that uranium around and it is not a dirty bomb, it is returning the uranium back to where it came from.

          • the fuel before going critical first time emits alphas, which your skin could stop. I have some uranium in the file cabinet next to me, zero particles from it are hitting me or anyone else, because the steel of the file cabinet stops them... of course, so would a sheet of paper.

            You have a problem, you see the word "radioactive" and your eyes spin in circles and a little cuckoo clock bird comes out of your forehead. But really there are many kinds and intensities of radioactivity. The potatoes in your ki

  • ...what could happen if they hack the object and throw them to Earth... with a nuclear reactor in it...

  • Project Orion for the WIN!!!!

  • This is a NASA estimate. So 4 years, NASA is really talking 2037 and they have run out of money again and the new, new, new ... etc estimated launch date is 2042 if there are no new problems and providing the project is funded again.
  • Elon Musk is a moron (see e.g. Twitter) but he did say it rather well, as does Newton's third law.

    There's nothing "nuclear" here about propulsion. it's just how they get nuclear-fission energy
    to the fuel.

    A true nuclear-propulsion method would involve some nuclear reaction that leads to energy
    released that would propel the spacecraft. Musk says that won't happen, and I suspect that
    absent some new way of subatomic reactions he's right. Sorry to say...

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      Elon Musk is a moron (see e.g. Twitter) but he did say it rather well, as does Newton's third law.

      Newton was even crazier than Musk. Still a genius. ...

      There's nothing "nuclear" here about propulsion. it's just how they get nuclear-fission energy
      to the fuel.

      A true nuclear-propulsion method would involve some nuclear reaction that leads to energy
      released that would propel the spacecraft.

      What, even an ion drive not "nuclear" enough for you? An engine emitting pure EM or other energy, like a big laser, would have awesome specific impulse - if you could ever get sufficient thrust. But to say that is the only "true nuclear propulsion" is ... I'm looking for another word ... nah, "moronic".

      • by gavron ( 1300111 )

        I'm guessing we're both on the same side here... hopefully there will be such a drive.

        OTOH I'm against false reporting and making up stuff.... so UNTIL we have such a drive... no more.

        E

  • We can't have nuclear power plants because they're too expensive. Isn't this going to cost way more? Now not only do you have to secure it to survive space travel, it's spending its time on land being manufactured and stored.

    But somehow that's totally fine. We can't build nuclear power plants safe enough, but somehow when you strap it to a rocket and blast it off into space, it's different.

    • It's not like we've not designed and tested putting nuclear devices on rockets before...

      They launched nuclear powered devices in the past. This is just another one. The big cost to earth power plants are because it's on earth for it's duration and people don't like such a thing going wrong in their backyard.

      Once in space, you only have to worry it'll bump into an alien and cause a war.

    • Nope, nope and nope.

      This will be a reactor of a few kilowatts of power, very tiny and useless for power plant on Earth. Power plants on Earth have reactors in gigawatt range, cost billions of dollars, have order of a million times more output than this puny nuclear bottle rocket.

      • and before reactor is made critical first time in space, fuel is just inert metal making alpha particles your skin could stop. if it falls to earth, no big deal.

  • They are using a fuel that they expel at the back to propel the object forward. That's a rocket however or whatever you do to the fuel before it's ejected.

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

Working...