I'd be interested to know how much it would cost to send a kilogram from Earth to Mars.So would the fuel consumption for reaching Mars and Neptune be the same? Is the price the same, no matter which planet we want to reach, assuming we're sending cargo? Or am I missing some other kind of cost besides fuel?
I'd be interested to know how much it would cost to send a kilogram from Earth to Mars. A simple (x;y) table or graph relating year to cost/kg.From the beginning of space travel until today. I believe we could get a graph out of this and analyze past behavior, as well as (roughly) estimate future trends.I can't seem to find this information anywhere. I know, for example, that the Curiosity rover has 900 kg of mass and cost $2.5 billion, but that cost also accounts for research&development and other stuff. I'm asking about the cost of fuel + spacecraft + personnel working on the ground assuring the cargo successfully reaches Mars.A question that arrives from this is: does the distance of the journey matter? I present 2 cases here:1) Spacecraft consumes fuel to leave the Earth atmosphere and some more fuel to get on the right track to Mars. Engines shut off for the next 8 months. It reaches Mars and reignites the engines for re-entrance.2) Spacecraft consumes fuel to leave the Earth atmosphere and some more fuel to get on the right track to Neptune. Engines shut off for the next 7 years. It reaches Neptune and reignites the engines for re-entrance.So would the fuel consumption for reaching Mars and Neptune be the same? Is the price the same, no matter which planet we want to reach, assuming we're sending cargo? Or am I missing some other kind of cost besides fuel?I believe those are difficult questions to answer, but as rough as the answers are, it could still provide a good discussion.