Quote from: Greg Hullender on 01/20/2025 01:01 amQuote from: ChrML on 01/19/2025 10:10 pmPossibly a dumb question, but can't there be some kind of solar powered active cooling system? That radiates the excess heat on the side not pointing towards the sun, to reliquidify the boil-off?Not dumb, but there are a lot of challenges to overcome to make this work. Since SpaceX already announced they aren't planning to do this, it hasn't attracted a lot of interest. Has SpaceX said Starship will never have actively cooled depots? Or have they only said they intend to first try passive cooling and/or frequent replenishment of boil-off? I imagine replenishment gets more costly when the depot is located beyond LEO. Also any BLEO depot likely needs to hold propellant longer. So that's where it seems like active cooling will eventually be implemented.
Quote from: ChrML on 01/19/2025 10:10 pmPossibly a dumb question, but can't there be some kind of solar powered active cooling system? That radiates the excess heat on the side not pointing towards the sun, to reliquidify the boil-off?Not dumb, but there are a lot of challenges to overcome to make this work. Since SpaceX already announced they aren't planning to do this, it hasn't attracted a lot of interest.
Possibly a dumb question, but can't there be some kind of solar powered active cooling system? That radiates the excess heat on the side not pointing towards the sun, to reliquidify the boil-off?
Quote from: sdsds on 01/20/2025 03:19 amQuote from: Greg Hullender on 01/20/2025 01:01 amQuote from: ChrML on 01/19/2025 10:10 pmPossibly a dumb question, but can't there be some kind of solar powered active cooling system? That radiates the excess heat on the side not pointing towards the sun, to reliquidify the boil-off?Not dumb, but there are a lot of challenges to overcome to make this work. Since SpaceX already announced they aren't planning to do this, it hasn't attracted a lot of interest. Has SpaceX said Starship will never have actively cooled depots? Or have they only said they intend to first try passive cooling and/or frequent replenishment of boil-off? I imagine replenishment gets more costly when the depot is located beyond LEO. Also any BLEO depot likely needs to hold propellant longer. So that's where it seems like active cooling will eventually be implemented.Has a SOFI-MLI combo ever flown?
Doesn't MLI depend on she open space between layers?
Unless this is a real thing maybe active cooling and radiators are the best trade for extended ops in the warm clime of VLEO.
I'm tying to picture a shield big enough to block ~40% of the sky (Earth), mobile enough to keep the ship shielded as the nose targets the sun and the sun-earth angle changes, not get in the way of a mating ship, do it all repeatedly, and still be reasonably light. Almost forgot. It has to withstand cold thruster blasts. I'm coming up blank but hope it's a lack of imagination.
Quote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 03:23 amI'm tying to picture a shield big enough to block ~40% of the sky (Earth), mobile enough to keep the ship shielded as the nose targets the sun and the sun-earth angle changes, not get in the way of a mating ship, do it all repeatedly, and still be reasonably light. Almost forgot. It has to withstand cold thruster blasts. I'm coming up blank but hope it's a lack of imagination.The complication that troubles me the most is the interaction between the Earth-blocking shield and the sun. When the sun is behind it, it seems there's no way to avoid it reflecting at least some of the sun's back onto the depot. Unless you put the active cooling on the shield, not the depot!
Quote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 04:07 amQuote from: sdsds on 01/20/2025 03:19 amQuote from: Greg Hullender on 01/20/2025 01:01 amQuote from: ChrML on 01/19/2025 10:10 pmPossibly a dumb question, but can't there be some kind of solar powered active cooling system? That radiates the excess heat on the side not pointing towards the sun, to reliquidify the boil-off?Not dumb, but there are a lot of challenges to overcome to make this work. Since SpaceX already announced they aren't planning to do this, it hasn't attracted a lot of interest. Has SpaceX said Starship will never have actively cooled depots? Or have they only said they intend to first try passive cooling and/or frequent replenishment of boil-off? I imagine replenishment gets more costly when the depot is located beyond LEO. Also any BLEO depot likely needs to hold propellant longer. So that's where it seems like active cooling will eventually be implemented.Has a SOFI-MLI combo ever flown?Not AFAIK, but of course neither have the (re)deployable "cone" shields.Quote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 04:07 amDoesn't MLI depend on she open space between layers?The MLI "quilt" (including an overlayer of protective aerocover fabric) gets glued (RTV) on top of the foam. You don't put foam between the layers. Quote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 04:07 amUnless this is a real thing maybe active cooling and radiators are the best trade for extended ops in the warm clime of VLEO.You still want to minimize heat ingress to minimize the mass of any active system.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 01/21/2025 05:13 amQuote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 04:07 amQuote from: sdsds on 01/20/2025 03:19 amQuote from: Greg Hullender on 01/20/2025 01:01 amQuote from: ChrML on 01/19/2025 10:10 pmPossibly a dumb question, but can't there be some kind of solar powered active cooling system? That radiates the excess heat on the side not pointing towards the sun, to reliquidify the boil-off?Not dumb, but there are a lot of challenges to overcome to make this work. Since SpaceX already announced they aren't planning to do this, it hasn't attracted a lot of interest. Has SpaceX said Starship will never have actively cooled depots? Or have they only said they intend to first try passive cooling and/or frequent replenishment of boil-off? I imagine replenishment gets more costly when the depot is located beyond LEO. Also any BLEO depot likely needs to hold propellant longer. So that's where it seems like active cooling will eventually be implemented.Has a SOFI-MLI combo ever flown?Not AFAIK, but of course neither have the (re)deployable "cone" shields.Quote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 04:07 amDoesn't MLI depend on she open space between layers?The MLI "quilt" (including an overlayer of protective aerocover fabric) gets glued (RTV) on top of the foam. You don't put foam between the layers. Quote from: OTV Booster on 01/21/2025 04:07 amUnless this is a real thing maybe active cooling and radiators are the best trade for extended ops in the warm clime of VLEO.You still want to minimize heat ingress to minimize the mass of any active system.There seems to be a misunderstanding. Everybody knows the MLI cells are pumped full of vacuum before use.
How would the MLI handle MaxQ? I've never seen it directly exposed to aero forces, and if I understand the principals by which it operates, the flimsier it is, the better it does its job.
MLI "quilt" (including an overlayer of protective aerocover fabric)
True that: a shade even during active cooling. But, a simpler and less perfect (and hopefully more robust) shade becomes a more viable option. Shading requirements go from 'stop as much heat as we can' to 'what are the trades between cooler size and shade complexity".
Speaking at the Smallsat Symposium here Feb. 6, Gary Henry, a senior adviser at the Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) and a former SpaceX executive, said the agency was working with SpaceX to examine how Starship’s in-space refueling capabilities could support a broader range of users.[...]Another Starship application that DIU is exploring is what he called “novel responsive space delivery,” which he defined as delivering unique payloads using rockets. The Air Force Research Lab is already studying “rocket cargo” concepts, like Starship, through a Vanguard program for point-to-point transportationThe DIU approach involves using Starship for delivering cargo from orbit to the ground. “You’ve got payloads on orbit and you want to do something useful with them, and then you want to reenter them and bring them back and exploit them in some way,” he said.
18:23 Musk reveals that Starship prop transfer delayed until 2026
If an on orbit tanker is MMOD damaged, [...] No MMOD shielding is needed.
Every Starship heading to higher orbits or a transfer orbit will be going with a custom orbit and timing. Even batches of Starships to Mars need custom orbits and timings. Even after there is a regular Moon run, they will be launching on custom orbits that change from minute to minute over the Lunar month. Another thing is because acceleration is needed to transfer propellants, the orbit is constantly changing and is thus always a moving target. The additional mass of shades, insulation blankets, cryo coolers, heat radiators, etc requires more propellant for acceleration during transfers.
I can't understand why people are bending over backwards to modify a Starship tanker into an orbital depot.
Every Starship heading to higher orbits or a transfer orbit will be going with a custom orbit and timing.
Another thing is because acceleration is needed to transfer propellants, the orbit is constantly changing and is thus always a moving target. The additional mass of shades, insulation blankets, cryo coolers, heat radiators, etc requires more propellant for acceleration during transfers.
This has the advantage no tanker has spent months in orbit accumulating MMOD damage.
Simple orientating the engines toward the sun works for lowering heat gain in the propellants.
A tanker should be able to land with some propellant in it. That propellant can then be detanked, chilled down again, and used later.
This has the advantage no tanker has spent months in orbit accumulating MMOD damage. If an on orbit tanker is MMOD damaged, it can be replaced by transferring the propellant to the next tanker launched. Maybe an extra tanker needs to be added to make up for the propellants lost. No MMOD shielding is needed. No cooling hardware is needed. Simple orientating the engines toward the sun works for lowering heat gain in the propellants. No sun shades that need deployment and folding back up. No solar arrays need deploying. Just have larger batteries if longer on orbit times are needed. They shouldn't be needed.
Are there any other options?
2) There are two separate QDs on a depot, one male and one female. The female one is only used for launch, and the docking/berthing hardware lines all depot clients up with the male one.
3) SpaceX decides to replace the existing gendered QD with an androgynous one. This is a pretty big change, and it's likely to be considerably heavier than the existing female QD on the Starship side.
Quote from: TheRadicalModerate on 03/06/2025 03:31 amAre there any other options?The reverse of your #1: the depot launches with a depot-gender QD supplemented with a kit that makes it appear ship-gender to the GSE. The kit is jettisoned after launch.
Something I don't think we've discussed, or at least haven't discussed for a while (everything old is new again on this thread):We've been mostly working on the assumption that refueling will reuse non-depot Starship's QD, which means that the depot has to have a gender-reversed connector on it. This is the main reason why we think that all refueling steps either have to be depot-to-x or x-to-depot; x-to-x won't work, nor will depot-to-depot.That seems like a nice, parsimonious design. Unfortunately, the depot still needs to be launched. So its QD interface with the GSE needs to be the normal interface. So how does the gender-reversed version get put in place? Some possibilities:1) What I used to call the "depot kit", which is a deployable payload that grafts on all the stuff needed by the depot after it reaches VLEO. In this case, a male-to-male QD attachment would glom on to the female QD and latch itself in place.2) There are two separate QDs on a depot, one male and one female. The female one is only used for launch, and the docking/berthing hardware lines all depot clients up with the male one.Update: Per Dan, below, note that this could allow depot-to-depot fueling.3) SpaceX decides to replace the existing gendered QD with an androgynous one. This is a pretty big change, and it's likely to be considerably heavier than the existing female QD on the Starship side.Update: From sdsds, below:4) Depot launches with a female-female adapter, allowing the GSE male QD to fuel it. Then:a) It's pulled off during the GSE disconnect process.b) It's jettisoned after reaching orbit.Either way, it's now a male QD.Are there any other options?