It is certainly good to see a private promoter pitching these ideas.
It conditions the public to the possibilities years in advance.
It is clear to me that landing beside a lava tube is an excellent way
to start. The mouth can be covered with a base bubble and the tube
itself can be exploited on a step by step basis. The main reason for
this approach, wherever it can be used is to place a wall of rock
between the crew and the external flux of radiation and the
environment.
It also sets up nicely for actual tunneling into the crust itself to
produce a well protected habitat.
As far as setting up grow bubbles, we are dealing with scant sunlight
and the heat used may exceed the value of what is produced if
anything.
Again an underground chamber complex made huge due to the low gravity
will have rooms a kilometer perhaps in diameter or a reasonable
fraction thereof. An artificial light source in the ceiling solves
the need for light and after that it is a matter of sourcing and
managing water.
Anything else is temporary and outright trouble. What we really need
to figure out is a way to produce something like concrete using
martian material. I would really like to line the surface with shot
crete.
Huge Mars Colony
Eyed by SpaceX Founder Elon Musk
Rob Coppinger
23 November 2012 Time:
07:00 AM ET
Elon Musk, the
billionaire founder and CEO of the private spaceflight company
SpaceX, wants to help establish a Mars colony of up to 80,000 people
by ferrying explorers to the Red Planet for perhaps $500,000 a trip.
In Musk's vision, the ambitious Mars settlement program
would start with a pioneering group of fewer than 10 people, who
would journey to the Red Planet aboard a huge reusable
rocket powered by liquid oxygen and methane.
"At Mars,
you can start a self-sustaining civilization and grow it into
something really big," Musk told an audience at the Royal
Aeronautical Society in London on Friday (Nov. 16). Musk was there to
talk about his business plans, and to receive the Society’s gold
medal for his contribution to the commercialization of space.
Mars pioneers
Accompanying the
founders of the new Mars colony would be large amounts of
equipment, including machines to produce fertilizer, methane and
oxygen from Mars’ atmospheric nitrogen and carbon dioxide and the
planet's subsurface water ice.
The Red Planet
pioneers would also take construction materials to build transparent
domes, which when pressurized with Mars’ atmospheric CO2 could grow
Earth crops in Martian soil. As the Mars colony became more self
sufficient, the big rocket would start to transport more people and
fewer supplies and equipment. [Future Visions of Human Spaceflight]
Musk’s architecture for this human Mars exploration effort
does not employ cyclers, reusable spacecraft that would travel
back and forth constantly between the Red Planet and Earth —
at least not at first
"Probably not a
Mars cycler; the thing with the cyclers is, you need a lot of them,"
Musk told SPACE.com. "You have to have propellant to keep things
aligned as [Mars and Earth’s] orbits aren’t [always] in the same
plane. In the beginning you won’t have cyclers."
Musk also ruled out
SpaceX's Dragon capsule, which the company is developing to
ferry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit, as the spacecraft that
would land colonists on the Red Planet. When asked by SPACE.com what
vehicle would be used, he said, "I think you just land the
entire thing."
Asked if the "entire
thing" is the huge new reusable rocket — which is
rumored to bear the acronymic name MCT, short for Mass Cargo
Transport or Mars Colony Transport — Musk said, "Maybe."
Musk has been thinking
about what his colonist-carrying spacecraft would need, whatever it
ends up being. He reckons the oxygen concentration inside should be
30 to 40 percent, and he envisions using the spacecraft’s liquid
water store as a barrier between the Mars pioneers and the sun.
A $500,000 ticket
Musk’s $500,000
ticket price for a Mars trip was derived from what he thinks is
affordable.
"The ticket price
needs to be low enough that most people in advanced countries, in
their mid-forties or something like that, could put together enough
money to make the trip," he said, comparing the purchase to
buying a house in California. [Photos: The First Space Tourists]
He also estimated that
of the eight billion humans that will be living on Earth by the time
the colony is possible, perhaps one in 100,000 would be prepared to
go. That equates to potentially 80,000 migrants.
Musk figures the
colony program — which he wants to be a collaboration between
government and private enterprise — would end up costing about $36
billion. He arrived at that number by estimating that a colony that
costs 0.25 percent or 0.5 percent of a nation’s gross domestic
product (GDP) would be considered acceptable.
The United States' GDP
in 2010 was $14.5 trillion; 0.25 percent of $14.5 trillion is $36
billion. If all 80,000 colonists paid $500,000 per seat for their
Mars trip, $40 billion would be raised.
"Some money has
to be spent on establishing a base on Mars. It’s about getting the
basic fundamentals in place," Musk said. "That was true of
the English colonies [in the Americas]; it took a significant expense
to get things started. But once there are regular Mars flights, you
can get the cost down to half a million dollars for someone to move
to Mars. Then I think there are enough people who would buy that to
have it be a reasonable business case."
The big reusable
rocket
The fully reusable
rocket that Musk wants to take colonists to Mars is an evolution of
SpaceX's Falcon 9 booster, which launches Dragon.
"It’s going to
be much bigger [than Falcon 9], but I don’t think we’re quite
ready to state the payload. We’ll speak about that next year,"
Musk said, emphasizing that only fully reusable rockets and
spacecraft would keep the ticket price for Mars migration as low as
$500,000.
SpaceX is already
testing what Musk calls a next-generation, reusable Falcon 9 rocket
that can take off vertically and land vertically. The
prototype, called Grasshopper, is a Falcon 9 first stage with
landing legs.
Grasshoper has made
two short flights. The first was on Sept. 21 and reached a height of
6 feet (2 meters); the second test, on Nov. 1, was to a height of
17.7 feet (5.4 m). A planned milestone for the Grasshopper project is
to reach an altitude of 100 feet (30 m). [Grasshopper Rocket's
2-Story Test Flight (Video)]
"Over the next
few months, we’ll gradually increase the altitude and speed,"
Musk said. "I do think there probably will be some craters along
the way; we’ll be very lucky if there are no craters. Vertical
landing is an extremely important breakthrough — extreme, rapid
reusability. It’s as close to aircraft-like dispatch capability as
one can achieve."
Musk wants to have a
reusable Falcon 9 first stage, which uses Grasshopper technology,
come back from orbit in "the next year or two." He then
wants to use this vertical-landing technology for Falcon 9’s upper
stage.
Musk hopes to have a
fully reusable version of Falcon 9 in five or six years, but he
acknowledged that those could be "famous last words."
A rocket stepping
stone
Another stepping
stone toward the planned reusable Mars rocket is SpaceX’s Falcon
Heavy launcher. With a first flight planned for next year from
Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the Heavy is a Falcon 9 that
has two Falcon 9 first stages bolted on either side.
Musk expects the
Falcon Heavy to launch from Florida's Cape Canaveral eventually. This
triple-first-stage rocket will be able to put 116,600 pounds (53,000
kilograms) into a 124-mile (200 kilometers) low-Earth orbit. But the
Falcon Heavy is still much smaller than Musk’s fully reusable Mars
rocket, which will also employ a new engine.
While Musk declines to
state what the Mars rocket’s payload capability will be, he does
say it will use a new staged combustion cycle engine called Raptor.
The cycle involves two steps. Propellant — the fuel and oxidizer —
is ignited in pre-burners to produce hot high-pressure gases that
help pump propellant into the engine’s combustion chamber. The hot
gases are then directed into the same chamber to aid in the
combustion of the propellants.
Because Raptor is a staged combustion engine — like the main
engines of NASA's now-retired space shuttle fleet — it is
expected to be far more efficient
than the open-cycle Merlin engines used by the Falcon 9.
While the Falcon 9’s
engines use liquid oxygen (LOX) and kerosene, Raptor will use LOX and
methane. Musk explained that "the energy cost of methane is the
lowest, and it has a slight ISP [specific impulse] advantage over
kerosene and doesn’t have any of the bad aspects of hydrogen."
(Hydrogen is difficult to store at cryogenic temperatures, makes
metal brittle and is very flammable.)
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