Quote from: Ben the Space Brit on 12/01/2020 08:48 amI imagine that the best 'parking spot' for the MTV would be one of the EML halo orbits. Hence Gateway - I think that NASA's forward planning for Mars is already assuming that they won't take an Orion all the way to Mars and back.Yes, most of the architectures I've seen lately use NRHO (that's because SLS can't really do payload to LEO and NASA assumes SLS - let's not rehash this argument please) and have Orion serve pretty much solely as a crew transfer vehicle.
I imagine that the best 'parking spot' for the MTV would be one of the EML halo orbits. Hence Gateway - I think that NASA's forward planning for Mars is already assuming that they won't take an Orion all the way to Mars and back.
Why can not the Orion and other vehicles get launched by a Falcon Heavy? Assemble in Earth orbit and then head towards Mars? It would sure save billions of dollars. For the price of a single SLS launch, get 40 Falcon heavy launches. Perhaps have no second stage like Skylab. Just some thoughts from an aviation engineer.
Quote from: AnnK on 12/15/2020 12:09 amWhy can not the Orion and other vehicles get launched by a Falcon Heavy? Assemble in Earth orbit and then head towards Mars? It would sure save billions of dollars. For the price of a single SLS launch, get 40 Falcon heavy launches. Perhaps have no second stage like Skylab. Just some thoughts from an aviation engineer.These are as much political decisions as they are technical. Politics often wins.
Unless I'm misinterpreting, NASA's overview of Orion:https://www.nasa.gov/exploration/systems/orion/about/index.htmlseems to indicate that Orion is intended for flights to Mars, or at least the vicinity of Mars, as well as to the Moon. I'm no expert on Mars missions, but from what I've read, a Mars mission would require a one-way journey of at least six to eight months, depending on the relative positions of the Earth and Mars at the time of launch.Given Orion's Apollo-based design, I'm wondering how Orion will be able to carry sufficient oxygen, food, fuel etc. to support four (or even two) astronauts for such a period of time?
Quote from: Disco747 on 11/09/2020 12:36 pmUnless I'm misinterpreting, NASA's overview of Orion:https://www.nasa.gov/exploration/systems/orion/about/index.htmlseems to indicate that Orion is intended for flights to Mars, or at least the vicinity of Mars, as well as to the Moon. I'm no expert on Mars missions, but from what I've read, a Mars mission would require a one-way journey of at least six to eight months, depending on the relative positions of the Earth and Mars at the time of launch.Given Orion's Apollo-based design, I'm wondering how Orion will be able to carry sufficient oxygen, food, fuel etc. to support four (or even two) astronauts for such a period of time?Also, I think anyone would go insane if they were stuck in Orion, which is probably pretty small even for 4 day missions.
Quote from: AnnK on 12/15/2020 12:09 amWhy can not the Orion and other vehicles get launched by a Falcon Heavy? Assemble in Earth orbit and then head towards Mars? It would sure save billions of dollars. For the price of a single SLS launch, get 40 Falcon heavy launches. Perhaps have no second stage like Skylab. Just some thoughts from an aviation engineer.Falcon Heavy isn't powerful enough. Not sure the exact lunar orbit capacity, but I sent SpaceX an email to find out.
The simple reason is that the current Orion MPCV design is oriented towards supporting missions to our Moon, with up to 21 days of active crew time plus 6 months quiescent spacecraft life. A Mars mission would last at least two years.
The Extended Duration Orbiter Cryogenic kit (EDO-pallet or CRYO) was a 15-foot-diameter (4.6 m) equipment assembly which attached vertically to the payload bay rear bulkhead of an orbiter, and allowed the orbiter to support a flight of up to 16 days duration.[1] The equipment included cryogenic tanks, associated control panels, and avionics equipment. Although Atlantis was partially upgraded to accommodate the EDO, only Columbia and Endeavour actually flew with the pallet. The pallet made its debut on STS-50, and was lost on STS-107.[4]Initially, NASA considered adding a second EDO pallet to Endeavour, placed in front of the first, for a total of thirteen tank sets, that would have allowed an orbiter to remain in space for 28 days, but managers decided against it when the International Space Station assembly began, and instead removed the EDO capability from the orbiter, to reduce its weight and allow it to carry more cargo to the ISS.[1][5]
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 01/25/2021 03:02 pmThe simple reason is that the current Orion MPCV design is oriented towards supporting missions to our Moon, with up to 21 days of active crew time plus 6 months quiescent spacecraft life. A Mars mission would last at least two years.That is largely a limit on the service module O2 supply. Two tanks holding 33 kg each with astronauts breathing at .84 kg per day gives you...(33 kg per tank * 2 tanks)/(.84 kg/day * 4 astronauts) ≈ 20There is potentially another day or two of air in the cabin that isn't in the tanks at launch time. Adding more O2 is potentially a relatively trivial matter. Replacing the 275 bar tanks with 800 bar tanks (equivalent to consumer available hydrogen fuel cell vehicle tanks) would increase O2 supply by a factor of 2.9 increasing crew air to ~61 days while not increasing footprint. Read up on the EDO project for the Shuttle:QuoteThe Extended Duration Orbiter Cryogenic kit (EDO-pallet or CRYO) was a 15-foot-diameter (4.6 m) equipment assembly which attached vertically to the payload bay rear bulkhead of an orbiter, and allowed the orbiter to support a flight of up to 16 days duration.[1] The equipment included cryogenic tanks, associated control panels, and avionics equipment. Although Atlantis was partially upgraded to accommodate the EDO, only Columbia and Endeavour actually flew with the pallet. The pallet made its debut on STS-50, and was lost on STS-107.[4]Initially, NASA considered adding a second EDO pallet to Endeavour, placed in front of the first, for a total of thirteen tank sets, that would have allowed an orbiter to remain in space for 28 days, but managers decided against it when the International Space Station assembly began, and instead removed the EDO capability from the orbiter, to reduce its weight and allow it to carry more cargo to the ISS.[1][5]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Duration_Orbiter
Quote from: Coastal Ron on 01/25/2021 03:02 pmThe simple reason is that the current Orion MPCV design is oriented towards supporting missions to our Moon, with up to 21 days of active crew time plus 6 months quiescent spacecraft life. A Mars mission would last at least two years.That is largely a limit on the service module O2 supply...Adding more O2 is potentially a relatively trivial matter. Replacing the 275 bar tanks with 800 bar tanks (equivalent to consumer available hydrogen fuel cell vehicle tanks) would increase O2 supply by a factor of 2.9 increasing crew air to ~61 days while not increasing footprint.
The "Orion MPCV" as currently designed is for traveling to the Moon. Period. If the want to scavenge the Orion MPCV design for usable parts for a Mars vehicle, great, but it won't be called the "Orion MPCV" anymore, will it?
Quote from: ncb1397 on 01/25/2021 04:40 pmQuote from: Coastal Ron on 01/25/2021 03:02 pmThe simple reason is that the current Orion MPCV design is oriented towards supporting missions to our Moon, with up to 21 days of active crew time plus 6 months quiescent spacecraft life. A Mars mission would last at least two years.That is largely a limit on the service module O2 supply. Two tanks holding 33 kg each with astronauts breathing at .84 kg per day gives you...(33 kg per tank * 2 tanks)/(.84 kg/day * 4 astronauts) ≈ 20There is potentially another day or two of air in the cabin that isn't in the tanks at launch time. Adding more O2 is potentially a relatively trivial matter. Replacing the 275 bar tanks with 800 bar tanks (equivalent to consumer available hydrogen fuel cell vehicle tanks) would increase O2 supply by a factor of 2.9 increasing crew air to ~61 days while not increasing footprint. Read up on the EDO project for the Shuttle:QuoteThe Extended Duration Orbiter Cryogenic kit (EDO-pallet or CRYO) was a 15-foot-diameter (4.6 m) equipment assembly which attached vertically to the payload bay rear bulkhead of an orbiter, and allowed the orbiter to support a flight of up to 16 days duration.[1] The equipment included cryogenic tanks, associated control panels, and avionics equipment. Although Atlantis was partially upgraded to accommodate the EDO, only Columbia and Endeavour actually flew with the pallet. The pallet made its debut on STS-50, and was lost on STS-107.[4]Initially, NASA considered adding a second EDO pallet to Endeavour, placed in front of the first, for a total of thirteen tank sets, that would have allowed an orbiter to remain in space for 28 days, but managers decided against it when the International Space Station assembly began, and instead removed the EDO capability from the orbiter, to reduce its weight and allow it to carry more cargo to the ISS.[1][5]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extended_Duration_OrbiterI read somewhere that the ISS's solar panels actually produce water that can be used for oxygen, is this possible for a smaller vehicle, or does it require bulky, heavy equipment?
OK, now the crew in the cramped capsule can survive 61 days of a 780 day trip. I'm not sure you're solving the basic problem here - there is no use for an Orion spacecraft on a Mars journey until you get really close to Earth, in which case you've been hauling this massive weight around the solar system for little ROI.
A few points, here, if I may... The lifeboat concept is more, I think, for certain situations where your transit hab module loses pressure or electrical redundancy. I doubt you'd be talking about casting away from all of the supplies and consumables needed to get home alive and then try holding your breath inside the Orion. Rather, you might have to rig data and air lines from the tanks in the hab into the Orion and live in it. Or, in a less broad interpretation of lifeboat, use Orion's systems to provide supplemental redundancy for some hab systems.