Author Topic: Nuclear Propulsion Could Be 'Game-Changer' for Space Exploration, NASA Chief Says  (Read 648 times)

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Online Elderberry

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Space.com by Mike Wall 8/20/2019

And the tech could power asteroid-deflecting lasers as well.

Humanity's next giant leap could be enabled by next-gen nuclear tech, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said.

During the sixth meeting of the National Space Council (NSC) today (Aug. 20), the NASA chief lauded the potential of nuclear thermal propulsion, which would harness the heat thrown off by fission reactions to accelerate propellants such as hydrogen to tremendous speeds.

Spacecraft powered by such engines could conceivably reach Mars in just three to four months — about half the time of the fastest possible trip in a vehicle with traditional chemical propulsion, said NSC panelist Rex Geveden, the president and CEO of BWX Technologies Inc.

And that's a big deal for NASA, which is working to get astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.

"That is absolutely a game-changer for what NASA is trying to achieve," Bridenstine said. "That gives us an opportunity to really protect life, when we talk about the radiation dose when we travel between Earth and Mars."

That dose increases, of course, the longer astronauts spend in deep space, away from the protective bubble of Earth's magnetosphere. And recent research suggests that the radiation dose accumulated by Mars-bound astronauts could damage their brains, affecting their moods as well as their ability to learn and remember.

More: https://www.space.com/nuclear-propulsion-future-spacecraft-nasa-chief.html

Offline Joe Wooten

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We almost had a nuclear drive 40 years ago, but NASA cancelled it under pressure from Nixon and a democrat congress. NERVA had undergone several years of ground testing and was almost ready for a test in space. It would have required a Saturn 5 to get it into orbit and another Saturn 5 launch to get the fuel up to it.