Another recent fiso presentation from Boeing about their 2033 Mars flyby concept. Not related to the JPL study, but I don't think we need multiple threads for deadbeat concepts like these.
Quote from: whitelancer64 on 05/03/2022 10:01 pmQuote from: Surfdaddy on 05/03/2022 09:39 pmIs somebody seriously suggesting spending >1.5 years in Orion's volume of space? Or am I missing something?Transit HabitatYes, but the table above for some options says "Crew Vehicle - Mission" as Orion. Are they saying that there still would be a transit habitat in those cases, or that Orion is all there is?
Quote from: Surfdaddy on 05/03/2022 09:39 pmIs somebody seriously suggesting spending >1.5 years in Orion's volume of space? Or am I missing something?Transit Habitat
Is somebody seriously suggesting spending >1.5 years in Orion's volume of space? Or am I missing something?
Quote from: Surfdaddy on 05/04/2022 03:59 amQuote from: whitelancer64 on 05/03/2022 10:01 pmQuote from: Surfdaddy on 05/03/2022 09:39 pmIs somebody seriously suggesting spending >1.5 years in Orion's volume of space? Or am I missing something?Transit HabitatYes, but the table above for some options says "Crew Vehicle - Mission" as Orion. Are they saying that there still would be a transit habitat in those cases, or that Orion is all there is?There is a transit habitat in every option. Crew Vehicle - Mission is saying what happens to the crew vehicle (Orion in 3 cases) during the mission to Mars.
NASA's Crewed Mars Mission Architecture (Current Plan)This infographic describes NASA's mission plan in detail from first launch to final touchdown back on Earth. (You may need to zoom in to read everything)
NASA's Crewed Mars Mission Architecture (Current Plan)This infographic describes NASA's mission plan in detail from first launch to final touchdown back on Earth. <snip>NASA plans to update this mission profile in "a few weeks".
<snip>It amazes me how bad many of the crewed Mars architectures that NASA makes are. Using 16 SLS launches adds tens of billions of dollars to the cost. The short-stay architecture makes the ratio of costs to benefits much worse than it could be, both for costs of dollars and for costs of risks to astronaut lives. The infographic shows nuclear power on the surface of Mars and the twitter thread mentions nuclear electric propulsion; I'm skeptical of the cost effectiveness of either use of nuclear for Mars but am less confident in nuclear being wrong than I am in short-stay and SLS being wrong.
NASA's Crewed Mars Mission Architecture (Current Plan)This infographic describes NASA's mission plan in detail from first launch to final touchdown back on Earth. (You may need to zoom in to read everything){snip}NASA plans to update this mission profile in "a few weeks".
You can't really rely on the commercial option until it's actually shown it will work as intended. Check out HLS as an example. Get it flying (plus permission from Congress) and maybe it's time for a new infographic.
Boy, this sure seems like proof that NASA doesn't want to leverage the commercial space transportation industry when it goes to Mars....
Congress/NASA had to contract with SpaceX to induce them to work on HLS.....
You cannot really rely on the SLS/Orion option until it's actually shown to work as intended either.
Quote from: DanClemmensen on 01/13/2024 07:32 pmCongress/NASA had to contract with SpaceX to induce them to work on HLS.....Think "had" and "induced" are not the words you are looking for. SpaceX's and NASA's goals aligned in this case, no more and no less.
<snip>Let me try again. If there had been no Congress/NASA money, SpaceX would not have gone to the Moon. They said as much. This contrasts with Mars, where SpaceX declared that they are going to Mars. I suspect that SpaceX will bid on Congress/NASA Mars contracts, but they would go even if they do not get a contract.
This infographic describes NASA's mission plan in detail from first launch to final touchdown back on Earth. (You may need to zoom in to read everything)
You can't really rely on the commercial option until it's actually shown it will work as intended.
Check out HLS as an example. Get it flying (plus permission from Congress) and maybe it's time for a new infographic.
Congress/NASA risk the embarrassment of their brave SLS astronauts being greeted by a bunch of SpaceX tourists when they first step foot on Mars.