refueling vehicles with crew in it short of emergencies is an anti-requirement.
Is there a suggestion that SpaceX plan to transfer the people from the launch ship to a pre-fuelled Mars ship?
Quote from: steveleach on 12/13/2024 11:20 amIs there a suggestion that SpaceX plan to transfer the people from the launch ship to a pre-fuelled Mars ship?I think that's the direction the discussion is headed, although there hasn't been much talk about Mars per se. It tends towards the idea that vehicles capable of EDL would stay close to the planet they serve while vehicles that don't or can't EDL travel between planets. (Counting the moon as a planet for this purpose.)It has the advantage that you can fully fuel and provision the transport vehicle before loading crew into it. I suppose it also has the advantage that you can specialize the various vehicles for their purposes. It has a drawback that you'll have to find some way to inspect and service the transports in space.
The refueling campaign for a Mars fleet will take awhile, possibly months. I think it makes more sense to fuel them all up before ferrying the crewed up, topping off the ships just prior to crew arrival and ship departure for Mars. The ferries can be optimized to carry lots of crew in economy-class (or even steerage class) conditions for the few hours needed to get to the Mars ships, which must be comfortable for the long-duration flight to Mars. I think one ferry load can accommodate five or more Mars ship crews.
Quote from: steveleach on 12/13/2024 11:20 amIs there a suggestion that SpaceX plan to transfer the people from the launch ship to a pre-fuelled Mars ship?I think that's the direction the discussion is headed, although there hasn't been much talk about Mars per se. It tends towards the idea that vehicles capable of EDL would stay close to the planet they serve while vehicles that don't or can't EDL travel between planets.
Quote from: Greg Hullender on 12/13/2024 03:31 pmQuote from: steveleach on 12/13/2024 11:20 amIs there a suggestion that SpaceX plan to transfer the people from the launch ship to a pre-fuelled Mars ship?I think that's the direction the discussion is headed, although there hasn't been much talk about Mars per se. It tends towards the idea that vehicles capable of EDL would stay close to the planet they serve while vehicles that don't or can't EDL travel between planets.Traveling between planets also greatly benefits from the ability to perform EDL. By using aerocapture (and possibly multi-orbit aerobraking) you greatly reduce the propellant requirements to travel between planets. This includes the Moon even, which still benefits from EDL capabilities on the return trip to Earth.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 12/13/2024 09:45 pmQuote from: Greg Hullender on 12/13/2024 03:31 pmQuote from: steveleach on 12/13/2024 11:20 amIs there a suggestion that SpaceX plan to transfer the people from the launch ship to a pre-fuelled Mars ship?I think that's the direction the discussion is headed, although there hasn't been much talk about Mars per se. It tends towards the idea that vehicles capable of EDL would stay close to the planet they serve while vehicles that don't or can't EDL travel between planets.Traveling between planets also greatly benefits from the ability to perform EDL. By using aerocapture (and possibly multi-orbit aerobraking) you greatly reduce the propellant requirements to travel between planets. This includes the Moon even, which still benefits from EDL capabilities on the return trip to Earth.I didn't mean to rule out aerocapture. But EDL includes a lot more than that, I think.
Where we have been doing some in-house testing of behalf of SpaceX is on their MMOD thermal tiles for in-space. So not the heat shield for reentry, not the hot side, but being able to have the MMOD tile and the reflective for keeping the cryos cold. We brought a couple of those tiles in and did some testing. SpaceX was very happy with the capability, both at Glenn Research Center and Marshall's test capability. And so we've expanded that relationship and being able to do some testing for them.
Something I haven't seen covered here (or elsewhere) is a comment at 7:55 in this Spaceflight Now video:<youtube link edited out>My transcription of the money quote:Quote from: Kent Chojnacki, Deputy HLS Program ManagerWhere we have been doing some in-house testing of behalf of SpaceX is on their MMOD thermal tiles for in-space. So not the heat shield for reentry, not the hot side, but being able to have the MMOD tile and the reflective for keeping the cryos cold. We brought a couple of those tiles in and did some testing. SpaceX was very happy with the capability, both at Glenn Research Center and Marshall's test capability. And so we've expanded that relationship and being able to do some testing for them.Bolding mine, to emphasize the most "WTF!?" parts of this.So... this puts a pretty different spin on things. Ain't no stinkin' Solar White paint involved if the whole depot and possibly HLS are covered with tiles.I've been worried about MMOD for a while. Indeed, I think that's the most compelling reason to keep the depot in VLEO--so the consequences of both impact and production of MMOD are minimized. If they're building a completely different tile technology for this, that's pretty interesting.Did anybody know about this?
MMOD is a much bigger risk if you want to keep vehicles in orbit for months while you fuel them. especially in LEO.Probably a bigger risk than launch, refuel ASAP, and leave. Which favors VLEO as well. You get 50 orbits to refuel, then scoot.I dub this "launch and scoot". Minimal time spent in or traversing high MMOD orbits.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 12/13/2024 10:55 pmMMOD is a much bigger risk if you want to keep vehicles in orbit for months while you fuel them. especially in LEO.Probably a bigger risk than launch, refuel ASAP, and leave. Which favors VLEO as well. You get 50 orbits to refuel, then scoot.I dub this "launch and scoot". Minimal time spent in or traversing high MMOD orbits.You still need to leave the depot in VLEO in between fueling campaigns. It could sit empty for months or even years. I guess you can deorbit them and build a new one, but that's a non-trivial additional expense to the fueling campaign.If the tiles can act as something like Whipple Shields, that could extend depot lifetime a lot.
Maybe a Depot is a bad requirement. Let's remove it and see what happens.
Then again, moving 100t of steel tank to a higher orbit is 1-2t of fuel (basically a burp), so if you are leaving it empty for months at a time it's not a problem, esp, if you have the equivalent of Whipple shields.
It's the sensitive re-entry shield that needs to avoid MMOD. So those need to be in orbit as little time as possible, as low as possible. That would be fuel tankers, mars bound cargo, and all human rated transport.
So basically, everything.
"Maybe [my favorite opinion this week is right]" isn't a real argument, I'll have you know. If you want to claim that it is actually a bad requirement, you have all your work ahead of you.
It occurs to me that one big advantage of VLEO should be that the impacts that do occur will mostly be from behind or on the sides. My reasoning is that anything in a circular orbit only has a lifetime of weeks, so the only MMODs one is likely to find below 200 km are ones with much higher apogees, which means they'll be moving faster than the depot. If they were orbiting in the same plane, they'd only hit it from behind.Of course, if an object's orbit were inclined with respect to the depot, its forward velocity would be the cosine of that angle, so the depot could run into those, but most of those should impact the sides, not the front. If one is worried about a tanker's heat shield suffering MMOD damage during fueling, it would make sense to plan to do the refueling such that the heat shield faced the direction of motion of the depot. A relatively small amount of shielding could expand the depot's MMOD shadow, if desired.Apologies if this was already obvious. (Double apologies if it's wrong!) :-)
The primary benefit for VLEO in regards to MMODs is the relative low density. They just don't last very long, so there's no accumulation.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 12/14/2024 12:18 amIt's the sensitive re-entry shield that needs to avoid MMOD. So those need to be in orbit as little time as possible, as low as possible. That would be fuel tankers, mars bound cargo, and all human rated transport.So basically, everything. Everything but a depot.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 12/14/2024 12:18 amMaybe a Depot is a bad requirement. Let's remove it and see what happens.Quote from: Twark_Main on 12/14/2024 12:38 am"Maybe [my favorite opinion this week is right]" isn't a real argument, I'll have you know. If you want to claim that it is actually a bad requirement, you have all your work ahead of you.No, the burden of proof is on the one who wants to keep the part (in this case, a custom depot Starship).Elon isn't being flippant when he says the requirements are probably wrong. 30 years of software engineering tells me the same thing.
Everything possible must be done to ensure astronaut safety.