The Oberth effect is easy to explain - why spend all that energy to raise your fuel to a 900km orbit when you can raise it to a 150km orbit for a lot less energy?
The lower altitude you throw stuff out the back, the less work you have to do to raise that stuff to a higher orbit.
Quote from: Roy_H on 10/13/2025 05:33 pmTo reduce TLI fuel requirement I changed the LEO launch altitude to 900KmYour AI is apparently too sycophantic to bring this to your attention — human to the rescue!! — but using a higher parking orbit is less fuel-efficient, not more.One of the ways NASA fit the lunar rover into the mass budget was by lowering the parking orbit from 100 nm to 90 nm. This increased the Oberth effect and made the trajectory more efficient.
To reduce TLI fuel requirement I changed the LEO launch altitude to 900Km
Indeed, the charts show you want to be lower than 500 km, not higher.
No the Oberth effect doesn't just apply to elliptical orbits. Yes the Oberth effect is counterintuitive, but I'm sure AI can explain it better than me.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 10/14/2025 05:59 pmThe Oberth effect is easy to explain - why spend all that energy to raise your fuel to a 900km orbit when you can raise it to a 150km orbit for a lot less energy?If your goal is just to reach any orbit, yes it takes less fuel to reach a lower orbit. In this case the goal is to reach Moon orbit.
I haven't attempted to make any calculations, so don't take this example too literally. ... Please provide proof that it takes less work to go from 150km to 600km than from 400 km to 600km.
The correct question is: does it take more fuel to go from 150 to 900 and then from 900 to 500,000, or straight from 150 to 500,000?I'm lazy and don't want to do the Hohmann transfer math, so I just Googled "Hohmann transfer calculator" and found this.150-900: 413.26 m/s900-500,000: 2991.01 m/s150-500,000: 3166.17 m/sSo that's 3404.27 m/s versus 3166.17 m/s, or a 238.10 m/s reduction in delta-v thanks to Oberth.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 10/15/2025 04:19 amThe correct question is: does it take more fuel to go from 150 to 900 and then from 900 to 500,000, or straight from 150 to 500,000?I'm lazy and don't want to do the Hohmann transfer math, so I just Googled "Hohmann transfer calculator" and found this.150-900: 413.26 m/s900-500,000: 2991.01 m/s150-500,000: 3166.17 m/sSo that's 3404.27 m/s versus 3166.17 m/s, or a 238.10 m/s reduction in delta-v thanks to Oberth.Ah, So you change the question in order to prove your point.Your own data shows that the delta V is greater going from 150 - 500,000: of 3166.17m/s than 900 - 500,000: of 2991.01 m/s for a savings of 175.16 m/s.My goal was to use the smallest possible tanker ship to carry fuel to get to the moon and back. Not to use the least amount of total fuel. And you have proven Grok was right.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 10/15/2025 04:19 amThe correct question is: does it take more fuel to go from 150 to 900 and then from 900 to 500,000, or straight from 150 to 500,000?I'm lazy and don't want to do the Hohmann transfer math, so I just Googled "Hohmann transfer calculator" and found this.150-900: 413.26 m/s900-500,000: 2991.01 m/s150-500,000: 3166.17 m/sSo that's 3404.27 m/s versus 3166.17 m/s, or a 238.10 m/s reduction in delta-v thanks to Oberth.Ah, So you change the question in order to prove your point.Your own data shows that the delta V is greater going from 150 - 500,000: of 3166.17m/s than 900 - 500,000: of 2991.01 m/s for a savings of 175.16 m/s.My goal was to use the smallest possible tanker ship to carry fuel to get to the moon and back. Not to use the least amount of total fuel.
I anticipated that reply, lol.If that's your goal, you and Grok are still doing it wrong. You'd be better off (both in smallest tanker size and least amount of total fuel) by using an intermediate parking orbit that's an elliptical orbit with a 150 km perigee rather than a circular 900 km orbit.Again, a human would've immediately recognized this problem, but Grok consistently shows it doesn't know the right question to ask (a more valuable skill than just being able to answer the question when someone has asked the wrong question).This is gold, keep going. Don't let humans and facts ruin the glorious AI future! You're doing a marvelous job showing the pitfalls of AI, don't stop now.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 10/15/2025 02:57 pmI anticipated that reply, lol.If that's your goal, you and Grok are still doing it wrong. You'd be better off (both in smallest tanker size and least amount of total fuel) by using an intermediate parking orbit that's an elliptical orbit with a 150 km perigee rather than a circular 900 km orbit.Again, a human would've immediately recognized this problem, but Grok consistently shows it doesn't know the right question to ask (a more valuable skill than just being able to answer the question when someone has asked the wrong question).This is gold, keep going. Don't let humans and facts ruin the glorious AI future! You're doing a marvelous job showing the pitfalls of AI, don't stop now. Again I feel compelled to clarify my goals. In your elliptical orbit there are issues I wish to avoid, one is that it swings into the Van Allan Belt
and two, makes multiple passes through the greatest number of satellite orbits where course adjustments might have to be made
and three, it is more difficult to launch other ships to the same elliptical orbit vs a circular orbit.
I did not want to send the Dragon crew into the Val Allan Belt in order to match orbit with the HLS. If you confine the elliptical orbit to a 900km apogee, then the Oberth benefit is less than the gravity losses.
However, I agree that technically you are right. Just doesn't align with my goals. And Grok did not ask the wrong question, I posed my questions to Grok to find the most optimal plan to meet all my criteria.
Quote from: Roy_H on 10/15/2025 04:10 pmQuote from: Twark_Main on 10/15/2025 02:57 pmI anticipated that reply, lol.If that's your goal, you and Grok are still doing it wrong. You'd be better off (both in smallest tanker size and least amount of total fuel) by using an intermediate parking orbit that's an elliptical orbit with a 150 km perigee rather than a circular 900 km orbit.Again, a human would've immediately recognized this problem, but Grok consistently shows it doesn't know the right question to ask (a more valuable skill than just being able to answer the question when someone has asked the wrong question).This is gold, keep going. Don't let humans and facts ruin the glorious AI future! You're doing a marvelous job showing the pitfalls of AI, don't stop now. Again I feel compelled to clarify my goals. In your elliptical orbit there are issues I wish to avoid, one is that it swings into the Van Allan BeltDepends on the apogee height. You can still get the same delta-v reduction on the final without reaching the inner belt.Quote from: Roy_H on 10/15/2025 04:10 pm and two, makes multiple passes through the greatest number of satellite orbits where course adjustments might have to be madeMost of the object density (and collision risk) is in a ring near the poles, whereas this would be passing through those altitudes closer to the equator, so it's not actually as concerning as the simple altitude plot would suggest.Quote from: Roy_H on 10/15/2025 04:10 pmand three, it is more difficult to launch other ships to the same elliptical orbit vs a circular orbit.Despite TheRadicalModerate's fearmongering, this isn't really true. Quote from: Roy_H on 10/15/2025 04:10 pm I did not want to send the Dragon crew into the Val Allan Belt in order to match orbit with the HLS. If you confine the elliptical orbit to a 900km apogee, then the Oberth benefit is less than the gravity losses.Can I see the math? The inner belt starts at around 5,000 km, so there's plenty of margin here.Quote from: Roy_H on 10/15/2025 04:10 pmHowever, I agree that technically you are right. Just doesn't align with my goals. And Grok did not ask the wrong question, I posed my questions to Grok to find the most optimal plan to meet all my criteria.Right. The problem is that AI doesn't push back. It's incapable of doing so. It prioritizes sycophancy over questioning whether "the requirements are wrong" (to borrow an Elon Musk phrase).AI is seductive because it promises access to a smart person, but without the annoying part where the smart person is smarter than you. Problem is, that's the most important part.
Quote from: InterestedEngineer on 10/14/2025 05:59 pmThe Oberth effect is easy to explain - why spend all that energy to raise your fuel to a 900km orbit when you can raise it to a 150km orbit for a lot less energy?If your goal is just to reach any orbit, yes it takes less fuel to reach a lower orbit. In this case the goal is to reach Moon orbit.QuoteThe lower altitude you throw stuff out the back, the less work you have to do to raise that stuff to a higher orbit.Please define higher orbit. I haven't attempted to make any calculations, so don't take this example too literally.I would be willing to agree that it takes less fuel to go from a 150km orbit to a 350km orbit than it would to go from a 400km orbit to a 600km orbit. Both raising by 200km. But it does not take less work to go from 150km orbit to 600km orbit than it does starting at 400km. Please provide proof that it takes less work to go from 150km to 600km than from 400 km to 600km.
Grok tells me that Dragon can achieve a 5,000km HEEO with booster landing at sea instead of land. Using a 5,000km HEEO the Lifeboat Tanker can be 1,360 ton capacity and total Starship Tanker flights reduced from 25 to 24. Not as much savings as I had hoped, but still an improvement.
Quote from: Roy_H on 10/16/2025 12:45 amGrok tells me that Dragon can achieve a 5,000km HEEO with booster landing at sea instead of land. Using a 5,000km HEEO the Lifeboat Tanker can be 1,360 ton capacity and total Starship Tanker flights reduced from 25 to 24. Not as much savings as I had hoped, but still an improvement.Are you sure? What’s the actual calculation?BTW, there’s a big difference between V3 and V4. Twice the capacity.
So if your rocket flies past the Earth at the exact same speed as the exhaust, then all the energy (relative to the Earth) goes into the rocket; the exhaust, which comes out at zero velocity relative to the Earth, simply falls to the ground. This turns out to be such a big effect, that the best way to get to the moon from your 900 km-high orbit is probably to a) retrofire to move to a 900 x 200 km orbit b) wait until closest approach to the Earth c) fire enough to boost into TLI. That is, the Oberth effect is so big that it's worth it to burn fuel to drop from a higher orbit into a lower (elliptical) orbit just so you can maximize the effect.However, if you kept all your fuel in LEO all along then you don't have to do this. On the other hand, some proposals do call for using tandem depots such that you'd fuel up two depots, then fill a starship from one of them and have the starship plus the other depot go into a highly elliptical orbit. (Of a few days duration.) The second depot tops off the starship, and at the next perigee, it does a big Oberth burn. It can actually achieve solar escape velocity this way.Another phenomenon you might not know about is that an elliptical orbit is faster than a circular one at perigee and slower at apogee. That is, a 900 x 200 km elliptical orbit is faster than a 200 km circular orbit at perigee and slower than a 900 km circular orbit at apogee. In the case of twin depots, that's all to the good, since you get that extra speed for your biggest burn.If you like, I'll work out the math for when the best way to reach escape velocity from Earth orbit at altitude h is to use Oberth and when it's not. It's not hard, but I have to be in the right mood, and dinner is almost ready. :-)
The inner belt starts at around 5,000 km, so there's plenty of margin here.
Earth's two main belts extend from an altitude of about 640 to 58,000 km (400 to 36,040 mi)[3] above the surface, in which region radiation levels vary....The inner Van Allen Belt extends typically from an altitude of 0.2 to 2 Earth radii (L values of 1.2 to 3) or 1,000 km (620 mi) to 12,000 km (7,500 mi) above the Earth.[4][23]
Mission sequence is now:1. launch HLS, Lifeboat tanker, cargo Starship and crewed Dragon into 200km LEO.2. Astronauts perform EVA and assemble solar panels, radiator, and MLI shielding on HLS and Lifeboat Tanker.3. Lifeboat tanker and HLS are fully fueled by 22 Starship Tankers. Assuming 150t fuel delivered per flight.4. Lifeboat tanker and HLS fly to 900km circular orbit.5. 3 more Starship tankers fly to 900km orbit and top off HLS and Lifeboat tanker.6. Crew arrive via Dragon and board HLS.7. HLD and Lifeboat tanker fly to LLO at 100km altitude. Polar orbit.8. Lifeboat Tanker adds 247 tons fuel to HLS.9. HLS performs Moon landing remains for about 2 weeks and unloads 100t cargo.10. HLS launches to LLO.11. Lifeboat tanker adds 253 tons fuel to HLS.12. Lifeboat tanker and HLS return to 900km LEO13. Astronauts transfer to Dragon for EDL to Earth.Lifeboat tanker and HLS remain in orbit for future missions. When required they will return to 200km altitude for fuel and cargo for next mission.
Re Number 5 above: I don't think you send 3 tankers to 1000*125 km for final fuelling. I think it is more like one depot filled by 2 tankers in 150*150 km orbit then send the depot to 1000*125 km to do one final fuelling. Maybe with 1000*125 km orbit we get away with a smaller tank and only need one tank filling the depot before going to 1000*125 for final fuelling?Is fuelling and astronaut transfer in 1000*125 km orbit a lot more difficult than in circular orbits? Is 125km too low a perigee?