Author Topic: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy  (Read 217704 times)

Offline RoadWithoutEnd

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #880 on: 05/27/2023 07:13 pm »
I'm a little confused: Are we talking about specific phases of abort (pad, boost, in-flight) or the entire profile?  And what would be considered adequate for each phase?
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Offline joek

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #881 on: 05/27/2023 07:24 pm »
I was thinking for maybe up to 12 people or so - not multiple "Dragons" on one SS. Not substantially bigger than the Dragon that already exists, since it gets a bit tricky with having high acceleration for the ejection.

That would be substantially different, both volume and mass. Suggest starting from scratch as it will not look like Dragon or current SS--at least from the tanks up. (And no, was not suggesting multiple Dragons; quite the opposite.) You have ~150t and ~1000m3 to work with. Optimize for people transport. If you have excess volume-mass beyond what is required for the projected number of passengers, feel free to allocate that to cargo.

Offline joek

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #882 on: 05/27/2023 07:33 pm »
I'm a little confused: Are we talking about specific phases of abort (pad, boost, in-flight) or the entire profile?  And what would be considered adequate for each phase?

Good question. Should it be full envelope (no black zones pad to landing)? Are we trying to deal with a booster failure? Or a Starship failure? Going uphill? Coming downhill? Sans specifics, assume full envelope). Otherwise someone is going to derail the conversation with "but what about...?" :)

So if I might challenge as a starting point: no black zones; pad to landing. ~150t and ~1000m3 to work with. Number of pax and amount of cargo TBD.

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #883 on: 05/27/2023 07:38 pm »
I was thinking for maybe up to 12 people or so - not multiple "Dragons" on one SS. Not substantially bigger than the Dragon that already exists, since it gets a bit tricky with having high acceleration for the ejection.

That would be substantially different, both volume and mass. Suggest starting from scratch as it will not look like Dragon or current SS--at least from the tanks up. (And no, was not suggesting multiple Dragons; quite the opposite.) You have ~150t and ~1000m3 to work with. Optimize for people transport. If you have excess volume-mass beyond what is required for the projected number of passengers, feel free to allocate that to cargo.

Realistically within the next 10 years, say, how many people would you expect to fly on Starship at once? My assumption would be max 20 people. That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard, and should leave a decent amount of space in the rest of payload section for crew to do stuff.

The more crew members you have on board, the harder it becomes to make something like this work.
« Last Edit: 05/27/2023 07:40 pm by chopsticks »

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #884 on: 05/27/2023 07:42 pm »
I'm a little confused: Are we talking about specific phases of abort (pad, boost, in-flight) or the entire profile?  And what would be considered adequate for each phase?

I was thinking initially of pad to SECO + freefall to touchdown. (not including re-entry at hypersonic speeds, although this might be possible too)

Offline joek

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #885 on: 05/27/2023 07:54 pm »
Realistically within the next 10 years, say, how many people would you expect to fly on Starship at once? My assumption would be max 20 people. That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard, and should leave a decent amount of space in the rest of payload section for crew to do stuff.
...

Dunno. See assumptions-conjectures but little more. Please articulate why "That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard". Apologies, but this conversation is worthless unless you start bringing some facts to the table. Why do you think that and what is the basis for your opinion?

Offline InterestedEngineer

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #886 on: 05/27/2023 07:58 pm »
Realistically within the next 10 years, say, how many people would you expect to fly on Starship at once? My assumption would be max 20 people. That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard, and should leave a decent amount of space in the rest of payload section for crew to do stuff.
...

Dunno. See assumptions-conjectures but little more. Please articulate why "That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard". Apologies, but this conversation is worthless unless you start bringing some facts to the table. Why do you think that and what is the basis for your opinion?

the burden of proof is on the proposer.

Where's the math for the 6Gs of acceleration needed by the ~100t capsule, 10x bigger than prior capsules?  How much solid propellant?  How is it going to eject sideways in some scenarios and vertically in others?

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #887 on: 05/27/2023 08:48 pm »


Realistically within the next 10 years, say, how many people would you expect to fly on Starship at once? My assumption would be max 20 people. That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard, and should leave a decent amount of space in the rest of payload section for crew to do stuff.
...

Dunno. See assumptions-conjectures but little more. Please articulate why "That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard". Apologies, but this conversation is worthless unless you start bringing some facts to the table. Why do you think that and what is the basis for your opinion?


I meant that a small ejectable capsule isn't fundamentally different from existing LAS on other rockets. It IS hard to make the whole top half of SS ejectable because of the flaps, header tanks, and the sheer size and weight of the thing.

And no, it's not a worthless conversation. This is a forum, a place where people exchange ideas.

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #888 on: 05/27/2023 08:51 pm »


Realistically within the next 10 years, say, how many people would you expect to fly on Starship at once? My assumption would be max 20 people. That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard, and should leave a decent amount of space in the rest of payload section for crew to do stuff.
...

Dunno. See assumptions-conjectures but little more. Please articulate why "That doesn't make an ejectable capsule so hard". Apologies, but this conversation is worthless unless you start bringing some facts to the table. Why do you think that and what is the basis for your opinion?

the burden of proof is on the proposer.

Where's the math for the 6Gs of acceleration needed by the ~100t capsule, 10x bigger than prior capsules?  How much solid propellant?  How is it going to eject sideways in some scenarios and vertically in others?


It's not 10x bigger than other capsules or 100 tonnes. As I said above, it's not fundamentally different from other capsules with LAS. It might have to be a bit bigger depending on the number of PAX (assuming max 12), but not that big.

My thought was that it would eject at around 45 degrees or so, not change angles.

Offline InterestedEngineer

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #889 on: 05/27/2023 09:47 pm »
\
It's not 10x bigger than other capsules or 100 tonnes. As I said above, it's not fundamentally different from other capsules with LAS. It might have to be a bit bigger depending on the number of PAX (assuming max 12), but not that big.

If it is not 10x bigger than other capsules then you are wasting all the Starship mass potential for something that takes about $6B to develop and will have a market lifetime of less than 7 years.

That is simply untenable.   It's not even budgeted by SpaceX.

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #890 on: 05/28/2023 12:41 am »


\
It's not 10x bigger than other capsules or 100 tonnes. As I said above, it's not fundamentally different from other capsules with LAS. It might have to be a bit bigger depending on the number of PAX (assuming max 12), but not that big.

If it is not 10x bigger than other capsules then you are wasting all the Starship mass potential for something that takes about $6B to develop and will have a market lifetime of less than 7 years.

That is simply untenable.   It's not even budgeted by SpaceX.


Where did you come up with the 6 billion and why do think it would have a lifetime less than 7 years?

Offline darkenfast

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #891 on: 05/28/2023 02:38 am »
Also, I don't know that I agree with the idea that an abort system such as used by Dragon brings more complexity than it's worth. Obviously having any kind of an extra system is by definition more complex but is it really that much more? It might be subject to personal interpretation as to how one defines what is an okay level of complexity and what is too much. On Dragon for example, it uses hypergolics anyway for on orbit maneuvering. Tying in the superdracos into the same propellant system theoretically shouldn't be that much more complicated, no? (D2 explosion notwithstanding).

Applying the same principle to my idea of an abort capsule on Starship would make it essentially a spacecraft that never separates (in nominal situations) from the second stage.

Backing up a little—if TPS and hypergolic RCS are not needed and you forgo the lifeboat feature—you could probably get away with with some SRMs to activate the ejection and forego hypergolics entirely. Reorientation and control could use cold gas thrusters.

Capsules are small in relation to the size of the human payload. How would you orient the seats? For lift-off, the acceleration loads are in one direction (towards the tail). For reentry (and right up to the flip), the loads are to the side with the TPS. After a long-duration mission, the actual landings (after the flip), may require reclining the seats quickly again. Shuttle had to have its middeck seats on their backs for returning astronauts from the ISS, for example, although it did not have to quickly rotate them.

So, how are you going to do this in your ejectable capsule?
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Offline Lee Jay

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #892 on: 05/28/2023 03:12 am »
...
So for low flight rate and unreliable launch vehicles, like every launch vehicle up until this point (with possible exception of the Falcon 9, especially if it actually continued flying at 100 times per year for another half decade or so without serious failures that would necessitate a high thrust LAS), LAS would improve overall safety, and be a clear safety advantage.
...

Yes, thanks, got all that. Question still remains (to @Lee Jay's) point: What is safe enough?

1 in 500 for professional astronauts.  1 in 10 million for the general public.

Offline MichaelBlackbourn

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #893 on: 05/28/2023 03:28 am »
...
So for low flight rate and unreliable launch vehicles, like every launch vehicle up until this point (with possible exception of the Falcon 9, especially if it actually continued flying at 100 times per year for another half decade or so without serious failures that would necessitate a high thrust LAS), LAS would improve overall safety, and be a clear safety advantage.
...

Yes, thanks, got all that. Question still remains (to @Lee Jay's) point: What is safe enough?

1 in 500 for professional astronauts.  1 in 10 million for the general public.

General
Public rides motorcycles and helicopters. We might be able to pick a public activity that’s a little more bold . For acceptable risk numbers.

Offline MichaelBlackbourn

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #894 on: 05/28/2023 03:41 am »
To match motorcycles you can have 30 fatalities per 100 million miles travelled. So around 4000 orbits. Or 250 days in orbit continuously.

Or a fatality every 10 days.

That seems achievable.
« Last Edit: 05/28/2023 03:43 am by MichaelBlackbourn »

Offline Metalskin

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #895 on: 05/28/2023 03:47 am »
1 in 500 for professional astronauts.  1 in 10 million for the general public.

General
Public rides motorcycles and helicopters. We might be able to pick a public activity that’s a little more bold . For acceptable risk numbers.

There is a difference between personal and commercial people related transport. I assume that commercial transport is held up to a higher standard than personal choice.
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Offline MichaelBlackbourn

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #896 on: 05/28/2023 03:50 am »
I’m not being entirely serious here. But let’s not pick literally the safest thing as our aim point. Some other forms of public transportation might be a better starting point… doesn’t have to be wingsuit dangerous… but not airline either… let’s land in the middle

Offline InterestedEngineer

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #897 on: 05/28/2023 03:50 am »

Where did you come up with the 6 billion and why do think it would have a lifetime less than 7 years?

well established up thread.  You want me to do the Google Search for you?

Sigh. Okay, I will

https://web.archive.org/web/20210301220753/https://christopherrcooper.com/how-much-does-spacex-dragon-cost/

https://letmegooglethat.com/?q=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2Fsearch%3Fq%3Dhow%2Bmuch%2Bdoes%2Bthe%2Borion%2Bcapsule%2Bprogram%2Bcost%26oq%3Dhow%2Bmuch%2Bdoes%2Bthe%2Borion%2Bcapsule%2Bprogram%2Bcost%26gs_lcrp%3DEgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTIHCAEQIRigATIHCAIQIRigAdIBCDY0NTdqMWo5qAIAsAIA%26sourceid%3Dchrome%26ie%3DUTF-8


Starliner is at about $1.5B.  So it's a range of $1.5B - $20B.

Man rated capsules are insanely expensive to develop.

Offline InterestedEngineer

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #898 on: 05/28/2023 03:51 am »
To match motorcycles you can have 30 fatalities per 100 million miles travelled. So around 4000 orbits. Or 250 days in orbit continuously.

Or a fatality every 10 days.

That seems achievable.

The correct metric is trips with fatalities per trip started, not per mile.

All y'all posting random numbers need to do as nearly every science teacher and engineering teacher I've had has said:  State your units.

1:500 trips is good to start with, but for long term 1:10,000 trips is a reasonable expectation.
« Last Edit: 05/28/2023 04:01 am by InterestedEngineer »

Offline MichaelBlackbourn

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Re: Abort options for Starship and Starship/SuperHeavy
« Reply #899 on: 05/28/2023 03:55 am »
To match motorcycles you can have 30 fatalities per 100 million miles travelled. So around 4000 orbits. Or 250 days in orbit continuously.

Or a fatality every 10 days.

That seems achievable.

The correct metric is fatalities per trip started, not per mile.

All y'all posting random numbers need to do as nearly every science teacher and engineering teacher I've had has said:  State your units.

1:500 trips is good to start with, but for long term 1:10,000 trips is a reasonable expectation.

I’m not sure you’re the arbiter of correct metrics. But I was just making a point that let’s not use literally the safest form of travel as our aim point. Let’s use sailing, or motorcycles, or those giant dune buggies that carry like 40 tourists that flip over… something more bold.

Tags: LAS black zones 
 

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