Fuelling up at orbital gas stations may help rockets in long-distance space travel
August 8th, 2009 - 2:32 pm ICT by ANIWashington, August 8 (ANI): Astronauts in the future may not worry if their rocket runs out of fuel, as they would be able to gas up at orbital gas stations floating in space, an idea which is finding favor with a group of scientists.
According to a report in Discovery News, the idea of orbital gas stations has been put forward by members of a presidential panel assessing options for NASA, in respect to sticking plans for a base on the moon or heading straight to Mars.
Stashing rocket fuel in orbit around Earth would open a world of possibilities for long-distance space travel, said a subcommittee of the board convened by the White House to review the human space flight program of the US.
“It is often said that if you want to go beyond LEO (low-Earth orbit, or about 200 miles above the planet) you’ve got to have a big rocket. I don’t think that’s right,” said Jeff Greason, co-founder of XCOR Aerospace based in Mojave, California, and a member of the space program review panel.
A key facet of the current plan for the space program after the space shuttles are retired next year is to design a heavy-lift rocket called Ares 5 which, like the Saturn boosters of the 1960s Apollo-era program, would have the muscle to leave Earth’s orbit and deliver cargo to the moon.
The space agency estimates the cost of a program to land astronauts on the lunar surface by 2020 to be 108 billion dollars.
Current 10-year budget projections for NASA, however, fall tens of billions of dollars short, delaying the return to the moon to the mid to late 2020s in the best-case scenario.
Greason presented an alternative path, one that would rely on smaller, already existing launch vehicles to deliver propellants into orbit.
This would enable rocket stages needed for deep space travel to be launched empty or nearly empty and later fueled in space.
“You can now do much larger missions with the same-sized booster,” Greason told panel members at a meeting in Cocoa Beach, Florida, last week. “It really is a game-changer,” he added.
According to Jonathan Goff, a propulsion systems engineer at California-based Masten Space Systems, most of the technologies needed for orbital fuel depots are highly matured, the result of efforts to extend the life of existing upper-stage rocket engines, which are used to tweak satellites’ orbits once they get into space. (ANI)
- NASA's Orion 'moon' craft that could put man on asteroid unveiled - Mar 23, 2011
- SpaceX unveils plans for world's most powerful rocket - Apr 06, 2011
- NASA presents new launch system with eye on Mars - Sep 15, 2011
- First private spacecraft launched to space station - May 22, 2012
- Obama may abandon NASA's moon mission plan - Feb 01, 2010
- China leads in outer space pollution: Russian space agency - Jul 30, 2010
- China may become second nation to land humans on Moon by 2020 - Feb 03, 2010
- NASA's next generation rocket makes booming debut - Oct 29, 2009
- Obama assigns NASA Chief engaging with Muslim world as his 'foremost' mission - Jul 06, 2010
- NASA exploring ways to clean up space debris - Mar 12, 2012
- Russia may repeat mission to Mars moon - Feb 01, 2012
- NASA's Space Shuttle Program Retirement Delayed Until 2011 - Jul 03, 2010
- New 'low cost' rocket to lift astronauts set to soar by 2013 - Feb 09, 2011
- Over 6,000 apply for NASA Astronaut Corps - Feb 05, 2012
- NASA launches Jupiter probe - Aug 05, 2011
Tags: astronauts, best case scenario, budget projections, discovery news, floating in space, heavy lift, human space flight, launch vehicles, low earth orbit, lunar surface, mojave california, propellants, return to the moon, rocket fuel, rocket stages, space agency, space flight program, space program, space shuttles, space travel