back to article NASA chief: ISS tests for super plasma space drive

In non-Mars-lander NASA news, it has been reported that the space agency will soon set out concrete plans to test a revolutionary new drive system aboard the International Space Station. The propulsion tech in question is a plasma engine known as Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket (VASIMR). According to Flight …

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  1. Sam

    Would this engine work..

    In the Earth's atmosphere?

    (Flying car alert) !

  2. Stuart Van Onselen

    Wow!

    39 days??!?! That is blindingly fast! I've heard estimates (for chemical rockets) ranging from several months right up to several years! 5+ weeks is a significant improvement.

    Anybody know if this drive is a new design, or just a bigger, more powerful version of the ones NASA have already been using on small probes?

  3. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Not just technofear...

    The nuclear reactors on the Soviet RORSATs *WERE* a legitimate cause for concern because a number of them failed to eject their cores into storage orbits at the end of their lives. Which meant that large chunks of intensely radioactive material re-entered the Earth's atmosphere, and on one occasion hit Canada.

    They also infuriated astronomers since they were unshielded (to save weight) and their emissions regularly interfered with observations.

    RTGs on the other hand are almost entirely safe and the people who protest about those are the usual 'Back to the Dark Ages envirohippies'.

  4. Eddie Edwards
    Alien

    39 days to Mars isn't fast?

    How long does it take to get to the West Indies on a wooden sail-powered ship?

  5. James
    Happy

    realy quick

    To Mars in 39 days is very very quick...

  6. Adam Foxton
    Happy

    39 days to Mars?

    That's really quite impressive! I mean it's routine for a saturation diver to spend almost that length of time in a tin-can (depressurising safely) so it's not like people can't stand being cooped up like that- and in a decent sized vessel you could make it really quite comfortable.

    It used to take them longer to sail from one side of the Atlantic to the other, so it's pretty amazing the distances we can now cover in such a short time.

    So with this new engine, Interplanetary travel will finally become practical- I may actually get to see my dream of watching a sunrise/earthrise/phobos/diemos-rise from the top of the Olympus Mons. Lets hope this doesn't get bogged down in fear over "OMFG NUKES IN UR SKIEZ 'RADIATIN UR KIDDEHZ!"

    It's the blue Oceaneering one with the helmet one small step for a man away.

  7. b

    mars in 39 days?!

    wowsa, this is what i call a technology story!

    excellent, bring it on..;)

    cheers,

    bill

    stuff and nonsense: http:www.eupeople.net/forum

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    How long does it take to get to the West Indies on a wooden sail-powered ship?

    About 2 weeks. It took Columbus a little over 2 months.

    I trust you're aware of "The Mars Ocean Odyssey" (http://1000days.net/home/) where some nut job is sailing non stop for a 100days to make a point about people being able to travel for years on end without it being that big an issue.

    There was a time when almost suicidal voyages were commonplace.

  9. Steven Jones

    Not fuel

    Just a little pedantic point. The material ejected out of such a system is not "fuel" by any definition I can find (which generally all refer to the use of a substance to produce heat or power). The "fuel" is in the nuclear reactor which is used to generate the electricity to run this thing.

    What is ejected out of the vehicle is the "reaction mass"; that's something ejected at high speed which, by good old conservation of memomentum, results in the vehicle being accelerated in the opposite direction. Of course the fuel and the reaction mass in a chemical rocket are one and the same thing. That is not the case here (or in ion motors).

    Just to be clear, the term "reaction mass" as used here has nothing to do with nuclear reactions. Some numpty will no doubt think it is.

    So there is more propulsion from a given amount of fuel, but that's basically because if it swapping chemical fuel for nuclear and using a method of ejecting the reaction mass at a much higher velocity that can be done with chemical power (ion motors, which have already been used in space, can do that but the thrust is much less).

  10. jai
    Alien

    technofear?

    c'mon! drink a can of Dr Pepper - what's the worse that can happen with an exploding nuclear reactor in space?

  11. Richard Wharram
    Alien

    Tau zero ?

    Or perhaps it needs a Conjoiner brain to run ? Details please !

  12. Anonymous Bastard
    Flame

    Fast?

    Still not as high performing as an orion drive and in space (NOT in our atmosphere) the radiation is not so different from solar winds at a reasonable distance. If you're going to be having nuclear reactions in space this converting-to-electricity plasma drive isn't that efficient.

    (Icon is imaginary propulsion drive)

  13. Stuart Van Onselen

    @Jai

    I'm sure we all know that it is physically impossible for a nuclear reactor to explode like a nuclear bomb.

    But I will grant you that you can get a (very much smaller) steam-explosion, like at Chernobyl, or what almost happened at Three Mile Island.

    But in a Mars-ship, the reactor would be built and run by people with a clue, as opposed to sleep-deprived Soviet "engineers".

    If it does still explode, remember that it will be much, much smaller than a commercial power-station, more-than-half of its nuclear fuel would shoot off into space (if it exploded in orbit), and the rest would disperse over such a wide area that it would be practically harmless.

    The biggest risk would be on take-off. Rockets do still explode on launch. But that's why the area down-range of the launch site is carefully chosen to be empty of people. And you could always launch it from the middle of the ocean.

    Or, you could launch the reactor in stages: More launches does mean more chance of a failure, but it also means that a single failure contains less radioactive material.

    The point is, engineers can and will find ways to mitigate the risks. That's what they've been doing since the discovery of fire! Fire, steam and electricity are all potentially dangerous, yet humanity has found ways to minimise that risk while maximising the gains to society.

  14. Drew
    Thumb Up

    Wow!

    That really is quick. If we can get this engine running then the whole solar system opens up for exploration. Let's boldly go!

  15. Mike Groombridge

    @technofear

    not alot really without earths atmosphere we'd be dead back ground radiation in space is actually quite high and is one of the limiting reasons of people spending time in space so another nukes worth won't do much what i wanna know is where they store the "reaction mass" are there planning to pick it up as they go along or store for the whole journey from the begining

  16. Anonymous Coward
    Flame

    In air

    "Would this engine work.. In the Earth's atmosphere?"

    Yes! We need nuclear-powered aircraft.

    But whatever the power source, it's actually in some respects easier in air than space because you don't need to carry any gas to throw out the back. The problem is that you have to deal with air resistance, whereas in space you can rely on a long slow acceleration without any resistance to slow you down. See Wikipedia.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrohydrodynamic_thruster

  17. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    12 Megawatts

    How do you get rid of 12 Megawatts of heat, given that you are in a vacuum?

  18. Rick
    Coat

    @Mike Richards

    "large chunks of intensely radioactive material re-entered the Earth's atmosphere, and on one occasion hit Canada."

    So where's the cause for concern then?

  19. Zmodem

    and all that heat

    is what causes storms in movies when the mothership comes,

    still better to make a new shuttle, it wouldnt look shit to all the aliens watching, a fleet of seven was a demand of the usaf

  20. Charles

    RE: 12 Megawatts

    I imagine most of the Work watts would be put into the thruster assembly, transferring the energy into the "reaction mass" as a newtonian force and "pushing" it out, providing a resultant desired reaction of forward acceleration.

    IOW, those watts wouldn't become heat but rather kinetic energy.

  21. vincent himpe

    Wow !

    just one word . Wow ! This is impressive.

    Now they have to find a scooping mechanism to collect interstellar hydrogen and we can have a real Bussard type ion drive.

  22. RRRoamer

    @kevin

    Convection and conduction are only TWO of the three methods of heat rejection. The third one, radiation, works just fine in space, as evidenced every single day when the sun "rises" over the horizon and you feel the radiation warm your face.

  23. WonkoTheSane
    Alien

    Trekkies?

    Am I the only one who thinks that the name of this new drive system will be shortened to just the 4th word of its current acronym?

  24. Graham Marsden
    Coat

    @Wonko the Sane

    > the 4th word of its current acronym

    Err, you mean Magnetoplasma...?

    It should, of course, be written VaSIMR:

    "Variable Specific Impulse Magnetoplasma Rocket"

    Mine's the one with the Dilithium Crystals in the pocket...

  25. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    @ Stuart Van Onselen @ kevin

    Stuart:

    'Anybody know if this drive is a new design, or just a bigger, more powerful version of the ones NASA have already been using on small probes?'

    It's never been flown, but has been tested on the ground. It's related to the ion engines that have been used on some space probes, but is capable of producing much higher thrusts.

    There's quite a nice article on it at:

    http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/9.01/plasma.html

    Kevin:

    'How do you get rid of 12 Megawatts of heat, given that you are in a vacuum?'

    Huge radiators.

    There are some really early concept drawings for 2001 which shows the Discovery we're familiar with, but sporting enormous radiators all along its length. They'd got some engineers to design radiators big enough to cool the reactor Arthur C Clarke needed to get his ship to Saturn (yes it was originally Saturn, but they couldn't do the rings). Kubrick decided to dump them as they made the ship much less elegant and he wanted something that looked almost skeletal.

  26. ian

    Is this a hybrid?

    Based on the above comments, only space-hippies would settle for solar powered plasma. Real men drive nukular reacters.

    A reactor can be put into orbit in bits and assembled there. Fuel rods are not dangerously radioactive when first manufactured. Besides, a 12MW reactor WILL require shielding after it once goes critical, and shielding is heavy.

    How long to Proxima Centauri with this rig?

  27. Iliya
    Go

    Back?

    I guess is not a round trip then

  28. Zmodem

    a submarine reactor

    can keep a sub with power for 10yrs, and a sub could still fit on the back of a small 747, the biggest proalem would be cooling, which could only weigh 2/30tons

  29. John Benson
    Coat

    Ion drive... Disney... 1957 or thereabouts...

    Seen on the Disneyland show as well as in theatrical release.

    About time...

  30. Charles Manning

    39 days toMars...

    How long to get your luggage back from Pluto?

  31. MD Rackham

    @Is this a hybrid?

    Really only need shielding between the reactor and the crew. And you need shielding for the crew anyway. One design is to store the reaction mass around the crew area to act as shielding. Water in polyethylene is good for that.

    Oh, and you might need some shielding on the pods in case they need to replace the AE35 unit.

  32. call me scruffy
    Coat

    Bah, clearly they just needed the right motivation.

    Is it just me that thinks its funny that within days of "hydrocarbons" being sighted in the outer solar system, a drive turns up that could get there and back within a year?

    All we need now is to find WMDs at wolf 359 and wormhole/M-theory/etc research will be exceptionally well funded.

    Mines the coat which is impervious to concentrated molecular acid;-)

  33. Will
    Thumb Up

    @Charles Manning

    LOL.

    I love your work.

  34. duncan campbell
    Go

    Head Hacker

    I see someone mentioned Orion. We'd have had a ship back from Proxima C.

    by now if there'd been any pols with balls...

  35. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    How long to Proxima Centauri with this rig?

    4.3 light years at roughly (best case scenario) 3.76E-4 the speed of light; (worst case scenario) 1E-4 the speed of light.

    Should arrive just in time for the Rolling Stones' "Cryogenic Storage" tour.

  36. Ben Avison

    @ian

    OK, here's a back-of-the-envelope calculation. Assuming the trip to Mars (let's be generous and say this is 0.38 AU) is achieved in 39 days using constant acceleration for the first half of the journey and the same constant deceleration for the second half, the acceleration achieved would need to be 0.01 m/s². Assuming the same acceleration could be sustained, to reach Proxima Centauri 4.22 light years away in the same manner would take 90 years...

  37. Charlie Clark Silver badge

    Nothing to see

    SMART already did the proof of concept flying to the moon. You get more science for your money in Europe.

  38. This post has been deleted by its author

  39. andy gibson
    Coat

    Is it safe...

    .... to test it ABOARD the space station as your article states?

    Mines the one with the telescope in the pocket to look for an ISS flying at impulse speeds towards Mars. Or Earth....

  40. David Stever
    Boffin

    ISS Testing

    Well, if they do the slow spiral orbit with the ISS, they can finally move it to a safe location like the L1 Lagrange point. Then it's at a handy location for the trip to the moon. Else, they can put it at L4 or L5, and use it to stage the fuel depots, hotels, and telescope and research facilities.

    We still need to figure out the Red Thunder launcher, to get the cheap ships into space (see John Varley's variation of the standard Heinlein story of the plucky kids who launch a set of railroad tanker cars into space, to tootle around the solar system. They just weight too damned much to get off the ground, where VASIMR will take over.

    I hope that Franklin gets to add to his trip total soon with either the Alt Space bunch he's with now, or else a human VASIMR test to a handy asteroid.

    Geek with glasses because by now FC-D must need them.

  41. Zmodem

    $62.5 trillion a gram

    need a fusion reactor to self propel into orbit and reach another rtar

    http://science.nasa.gov/newhome/headlines/prop12apr99_1.htm

  42. Anonymous Coward
    Paris Hilton

    When will you puny earthlings realize that the secret to space travel is...

    marklar? All you have to do is marklar the marklar while marklaring the marklar to bend space-time and achieve supra-luminal velocities.

  43. Cortland Richmond

    Already been done

    Check out this page

    http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/12/031223222322.htm

    and the links under related stories.

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