Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/15/2013 06:54 pm...only a primary spin axis; the solar panels are not retracted as mentioned in the Keck paper; other tumbling axes are not at all considered.1) Could the NEO candidates still tumble wildly enough to foil the mission? AIUI tumbling is not stable over longer periods.QuoteThe mission profile per the Keck paper is a one shot deal. There's plenty of time to characterize the spin of one asteroid, but no means to find another ...2) If an asteroid says no it means ... well just ram the bagger at it and hope for the best Seriously, before the video came out I thought the plan is to do just that, ingest a tumbling asteroid into the bag, start tightening it and let friction forces sort out which way the (well padded! ) spacecraft starts rotating.QuoteOf the hundred million candidates, they must find the "lazy" asteroid first; yet another cost, hand waved away by the political insiders who push this mission.3) Is there even a way to measure spin rates of objects that small millions miles/kms away?QuoteAlso note that they plan to shut down comm with the bagger droid until its rate of rotation settles down to allow resumption of a comm channel with Earth.4) No some sort of low-bandwidth omnidirectional backup?
...only a primary spin axis; the solar panels are not retracted as mentioned in the Keck paper; other tumbling axes are not at all considered.
The mission profile per the Keck paper is a one shot deal. There's plenty of time to characterize the spin of one asteroid, but no means to find another ...
Of the hundred million candidates, they must find the "lazy" asteroid first; yet another cost, hand waved away by the political insiders who push this mission.
Also note that they plan to shut down comm with the bagger droid until its rate of rotation settles down to allow resumption of a comm channel with Earth.
To estimate the time and propellant required to de-tumble the asteroid, the object was assumed to have a mass of 1,100 t, be rotating at 1 RPM about its major axis, and have a cylindrical shape of 6-m diameter x 12-m long.
The large mass of the captured asteroid and relatively low thrust available from the Hall system, require that the spacecraft + asteroid must have the delta-V necessary to target the lunar gravity assist well before the lunar encounter. This requirement, which appears feasible, is not unlike the requirement of the Dawn mission...
Additional work still remains for the preliminary design of final insertion operations and the final asteroid parking orbit. ... For a long duration solution, a propellant resupply or an additional propulsion stage after Earth arrival may be required depending on the outcome of the detailed stability analysis.
Is a parametric estimate based on mostly mass-based Cost Estimating Relationships (CERs) using historical cost data.
if you can see it and measure the magnitude, you should be able to measure the spin from the magnitude oscillation, unless it is very, very uniform, or very very slow.You never read Rendez-vous with Rama?
Quote from: alexterrell on 04/16/2013 10:50 amif you can see it and measure the magnitude, you should be able to measure the spin from the magnitude oscillation, unless it is very, very uniform, or very very slow.You never read Rendez-vous with Rama?Alas, so long ago I seem to have forgotten the technical details...Apparently radar is also good to a certain extent.
If NASA's going to work with PR and DSI on this project, Arkyd reconnaissance is one of the first things they should help fund. Voters and taxpayers are already calling for a more complete inventory of Chelyabinsk sized rocks. The Arkyds seem a good way to achieve this goal.
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/18/2013 06:25 pmQuote from: Hop_David on 04/18/2013 05:21 pmUntil we have an extra terrestrial propellant source, there's not much incentive for propellant depots or orbital ferries. And without depots and ferries, there's little reason to invest in mining lunar ice.Well, you certainly could go for the ice that's ten years away, and not go for the ice that's three or four days away.Once the rock is at EML2, it will be 8 days and 3.5 km/s from LEO. ... don't hold your breath waiting for landers that'll get humans to the moon's surface....And the TRL for mining ice at 40 degrees kelvin is better?
Quote from: Hop_David on 04/18/2013 05:21 pmUntil we have an extra terrestrial propellant source, there's not much incentive for propellant depots or orbital ferries. And without depots and ferries, there's little reason to invest in mining lunar ice.Well, you certainly could go for the ice that's ten years away, and not go for the ice that's three or four days away.
Until we have an extra terrestrial propellant source, there's not much incentive for propellant depots or orbital ferries. And without depots and ferries, there's little reason to invest in mining lunar ice.
Over the ten to twenty years while this first hundred ton demonstration is instantiated, we will learn a lot more about the characterization of the one hundred million some odd candidate asteroids.
Such characterization wouldn't commence with the retrieval of an asteroid. It would start much sooner with the launch of the Arkyd probes. And it would continue during and after retrieval.
A large part of the first vehicle's price will be design costs. The second, third, and fourth retrieval vehicles would be cheaper. NASA has said it hopes to work with PR as well as DSI. Why would PR sit on its hands all that time? ...Planetary Resources has said they would reduce cost via mass production. ...Your imaginary NASA prohibition of reuse is easily debunked. See the reuse of the Themis hardware to study the moon in the
And if there were such a policy, then it would prohibit reusable lunar lander/ascent vehicles. As well as reusable ACES tankers.
X tonnes of water could have plenty of uses.While the asteroid retrieval vehicles would use ion engines, they could use chemical to avoid the long slow spiral from LEO to C3=0. The water from the first retrieval would make subsequent retrievals easier.The water could also be used for tugs that would ferry sats from LEO to GEO, you know the stuff they want to use lunar ice for.As for leading to human exploration? PR's goal is profitably mine extra-terrestrial resources, not send humans to Mars or elsewhere.However profitable space exploitation is a prerequisite for human activity beyond flags and footprints publicity stunts. If you like, you can wait for far-sighted governments to build space infrastructure needed for human settlement. Wake me up when you get a bite.
Quote from: Hop_David on 04/17/2013 03:12 pmIf NASA's going to work with PR and DSI on this project, Arkyd reconnaissance is one of the first things they should help fund. Voters and taxpayers are already calling for a more complete inventory of Chelyabinsk sized rocks. The Arkyds seem a good way to achieve this goal. Pretty much agree with that aspect.
You and I have talked about the limitations of a delta-vee analysis alone, especially regarding the time needed. At this early stage in the "design" of a propellant manufacturing capability, I think it would be fair to grant either approach the same time and money. YMMV.
And if the captured NEO derived propellant and GCR shielding become available in a stable high Lunar orbit along with Lunar polar ice derived propellant and regolith GCR shielded surface habitats, we could have a useful combination to significantly reduce BLEO and Lunar surface mission costs and risks.
The stated policy, since 04-15-10, is no re-usable lunar landers. BTDT. You know this to be true. Just the other day, Mr. Bolden stated, "NASA won't land another man on the Moon in my lifetime". Therefore no ACES landers either. You also know this. It is stated policy of the OP of the other thread!
And since there is the stated need for NASA to only build one-off missions, there will not be any re-usable components to this extra terrestrial propellant source infrastructure.
In the short term, is Congress going to be interested in spending the money for developing the eventual high Lunar orbit infrastructure that would be needed, including a DSH and equipment to produce the ISRU propellant and GCR shielding? ...Could a private company manage the high Lunar orbit DSH/NEO ISRU propellant production facility?
I would give PR alone better than even odds of realizing their goals. If they get some help from the government, their chances are even better.
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/19/2013 01:35 pmThe stated policy, since 04-15-10, is no re-usable lunar landers. BTDT. You know this to be true. Just the other day, Mr. Bolden stated, "NASA won't land another man on the Moon in my lifetime". Therefore no ACES landers either. You also know this. It is stated policy of the OP of the other thread!Focus. You're assertion was:Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/18/2013 06:25 pmAnd since there is the stated need for NASA to only build one-off missions, there will not be any re-usable components to this extra terrestrial propellant source infrastructure.Somehow you have morphed present administration not interested in the moon to No re-usable lunar landers, tankers, no reusable NASA components of any kind EVER.
Happily this No Re-Use policy is a figment of your imagination.
Such help could come in several forms. Design of a successful capture/return vehicle is only one. Others are contracting to locate suitable asteroids using their telescope fleet. Contracting for the launch of such fleet. Contracting for close evaluation of candidates. and so forth.
Me make up what Policy must be.
Quote from: KeckTo estimate the time and propellant required to de-tumble the asteroid, the object was assumed to have a mass of 1,100 t, be rotating at 1 RPM about its major axis, and have a cylindrical shape of 6-m diameter x 12-m long.2) Of course, if the object has any spin around its long axis, most bets are off. They hope to find a perfectly thrown "football". A key factor for their success will be the hunt.
Juist revisiting my issues about the cost estimate:Quote from: KeckThe large mass of the captured asteroid and relatively low thrust available from the Hall system, require that the spacecraft + asteroid must have the delta-V necessary to target the lunar gravity assist well before the lunar encounter. This requirement, which appears feasible, is not unlike the requirement of the Dawn mission...Except that they assume the reader won't notice that the Dawn mission didn't deal with a 500 ton (or 1100 ton, depending on their "margin") object. Which kinda makes ya wonder what they mean when they say "not unlike".
But what happens when they get the bag to, well, Bag-End?Quote from: KeckAdditional work still remains for the preliminary design of final insertion operations and the final asteroid parking orbit. ... For a long duration solution, a propellant resupply or an additional propulsion stage after Earth arrival may be required depending on the outcome of the detailed stability analysis.Did you say that you wanted the asteroid in a stable orbit? Oh. That's going to cost a bit more. The twenty year "retirement" plan to keep it in a stable orbit.
There's a poster here who complains bitterly about the TRL argument. It's not seen by him as having any validity whatsoever on the feasibility of this mission.
There's no principled problem with doing a demo "bag" mission, but they always precede the "real" missions by a number of years. The Keck paper makes no realistic projection of how they would proceed. The paper is designed to get only the first $2.6B, falsely promising that is the entire cost of the final object. It is not, by any stretch.
The de-spinning task is just attitude control starting with high initial angular velocities. There is some question about how much power your solar panels would produce while spinning, but lower power (above a tiny threshold) just means it takes longer to de-spin.
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/19/2013 07:34 pm Me make up what Policy must be.Exactly. But you didn't need a wall of text to admit this.
No, it doesn't have to be the "perfectly thrown football." It means the capture mechanism design team for this study chose to limit the amount of effort they expended on this detail. An actual detailed design, which is in the budget, would tackle the various what-ifs. They chose this as a test case to design against, not as the only possible solution, nor as the most convoluted problem to work against.
They are clearly referring to trajectory and timing of burns. They aren't assuming the reader won't notice mass differences, they are assuming the reader will be intelligent enough to catch their point about how that mass will make a difference. The thrust/weight ratio will be similarly tiny, in comparison to trajectories calculated using chemical rockets on typical spacecraft (eg planetary probes).
Again, they are saying the detailed analysis included in their budget would refine the numbers. There's no point in getting super-detailed with hypotheticals. The indications are the orbit would be stable for at least 20 years. If NASA screwed up, never did any further analyses to define a more stable orbit, and this orbit decayed quickly for some reason, and they "Skylabbed" it by not boosting, it would crash into the moon. Not great, wasteful, just like Skylab, but no harm done.
I explained why I thought the SEP was very feasible; it is not much larger in size than several commercial options, and smaller than tested experimental designs. For the capture mechanism, I believe the concept is straightforward enough to rapidly advance to the point where it could be responsibly flown. It is a Newtonian mechanics problem. We're not talking space-based nuclear or fusion drives here, just forces and moments on a particular structural design. Since Bigelow has extensive experience in inflatable structures, perhaps they could also have a hand in building these inflatable rings.