Posted on 06/15/2002 5:14:45 PM PDT by vannrox
The Kuiper Express spacecraft may be sent to Pluto.
NASA may go nuclear again to provide power for both instruments and propulsion to spacecraft flying on deep-space missions. With Sean O'Keefe as its new chief, and the blessing of the Bush administration, the space agency plans to bring nuclear fission reactors back in style.
Besides getting all the electricity they need from radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs), spacecraft propelled by nuclear engines will cut considerably the travel time to distant planets, says Ed Weiler, NASA's chief scientist. "For 40 years NASA has been doing planetary science in the same way. That is, you accelerate for 5, 10, 15 minutes, and then you stop. And you coast, and you coast, and you coast," Weiler says. "That's not the way to do exploration."
The first to take advantage of NASA's new nuclear trend could be Kuiper Express, a spacecraft designed to take the first closeup look at our solar system's outermost planet--Pluto. Even though the mission was recently killed, it could come back to life as a candidate for nuclear propulsion. The last time NASA launched a nuclear-powered spacecraft was in 1997, when it sent Cassini and 72 pounds of plutonium toward Saturn. Since then, the space agency has let its RTG inventory dwindle down to one.
Unlike chemical rockets, which burn for only a few minutes, nuclear engines can burn for months. That means spacecraft can go much faster, conceivably turning a round trip to, say, Mars from a 3-year affair into a cruise that would last only about 12 weeks.
Other Nuclear Rocket Plans
NASA's Antimatter Spaceships
Imal
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