Onwards to Uranus and Neptune! |
Onwards to Uranus and Neptune! |
Jan 12 2008, 09:40 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 813 Joined: 8-February 04 From: Arabia Terra Member No.: 12 |
As soon as MESSENGER gets to Mercury, the most poorly explored planets in the solar system will be Uranus and Neptune. Could this lead to a revival of interest in the ice giants and their retinue, in the same way that the existence of New Horizons is perhaps partly due to the Pluto stamp*?
*via Pluto Fast Flyby and later Pluto Kuiper Express |
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Feb 17 2008, 08:17 PM
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 21 Joined: 29-November 06 From: SESE/ASU Member No.: 1437 |
This has got me thinking about if you could pull off a Uranus/Neptune Orbiter for less than $850 million...
Aerocapture is obviously the way to go, and the Titan Explorer orbiter seems a good place to start. It masses ~1800 kg wet, while the cruise stage ~1500 kg, mainly fuel. If we drop the balloon and lander, we cut out roughly 2/3 the mass of the cruise stage, giving a payload mass of ~2300 kg. That's about half the mass of TE. The option then is either to use a low-end EELV (Atlas 401, Delta IV sans SRBs, or Falcon 9) for a single launch (more likely), or launch two spacecraft (one Neptune, one Uranus) on an Atlas 551 (much more cost effective, but less likely). The point is, I don't think it's a given that a ice giant orbiter has to a ridiculously expensive Battlestar Galactica style mission like Cassini. It's just like Mars Sample Return; if you're willing to use new technology (aerocapture and ASTG in this case) and make compromises, you can turn a perpetually paper mission into reality... Simon |
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