by scr33d » Sat Apr 21, 2018 9:47 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Sat Apr 21, 2018 4:35 pm
JohnD wrote: ↑Sat Apr 21, 2018 4:24 pm
Well, I was being provocative, and Chris either fell for bit, or (more likely) called my bluff!
But I do still feel that an even half reusable launch rocket is a step towards a truly space faring culture. After all, if we could find evidence of life elsewhere, unless future technologies can transport us there from the surface of Earth ( as likely as FTL, I imagine) we'll go one being BillyNoMates if we have to launch a brand new ship every time.
What I'm not convinced of is that having this
type of rocket with a reusable component is necessarily economically important. If we ultimately colonize the Solar System (I disregard anything beyond that as pure fantasy), perhaps in a Kim Stanley Robinson sort of future, I don't think we're going to be using that sort of rocket at all (a brute force bucket of fuel and a rocket engine), but rather, something more akin to an airplane. Rockets of the sort we currently have stand to hugely increase our pollution problems if they get used much more than now.
Also, what people don't realize is that the Newtonian rocket equations are reversible in time. That is, the equations are valid with time running forward as well as backward. What this means is that *all* rockets are capable of landing themselves--it is the same guidance system/algorithm that controls a rocket's ascend that lands Falcon's first stage. SpaceX didn't invent anything new or did anything bold, they just happens to be a company that thought about economics. And Musk understands and knows how to milk the public with these launches that his fans think of him as the Second Coming. Subjectively, his rockets are on par with NASA's 1960 hardware (his capsule are still not man-rated).
The real technology that people should be in awe of are the science and engineering behind TESS, LIGO, the upcoming LISA, etc., but it is much harder for people to appreciate those because of the physics.
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=281702 time=1524328534 user_id=117706]
[quote=JohnD post_id=281701 time=1524327875 user_id=100329]
Well, I was being provocative, and Chris either fell for bit, or (more likely) called my bluff!
But I do still feel that an even half reusable launch rocket is a step towards a truly space faring culture. After all, if we could find evidence of life elsewhere, unless future technologies can transport us there from the surface of Earth ( as likely as FTL, I imagine) we'll go one being BillyNoMates if we have to launch a brand new ship every time.
[/quote]
What I'm not convinced of is that having this [i]type [/i]of rocket with a reusable component is necessarily economically important. If we ultimately colonize the Solar System (I disregard anything beyond that as pure fantasy), perhaps in a Kim Stanley Robinson sort of future, I don't think we're going to be using that sort of rocket at all (a brute force bucket of fuel and a rocket engine), but rather, something more akin to an airplane. Rockets of the sort we currently have stand to hugely increase our pollution problems if they get used much more than now.
[/quote]
Also, what people don't realize is that the Newtonian rocket equations are reversible in time. That is, the equations are valid with time running forward as well as backward. What this means is that *all* rockets are capable of landing themselves--it is the same guidance system/algorithm that controls a rocket's ascend that lands Falcon's first stage. SpaceX didn't invent anything new or did anything bold, they just happens to be a company that thought about economics. And Musk understands and knows how to milk the public with these launches that his fans think of him as the Second Coming. Subjectively, his rockets are on par with NASA's 1960 hardware (his capsule are still not man-rated).
The real technology that people should be in awe of are the science and engineering behind TESS, LIGO, the upcoming LISA, etc., but it is much harder for people to appreciate those because of the physics.