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How infeasible is a Kuiper Belt equivalent of Dawn
Tom Womack
post Nov 25 2008, 01:41 PM
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I presume that it is completely infeasible without a very powerful nuclear reactor and many years' production of ion engines to do anything remotely like Dawn in the Kuiper belt - the distances are just too long.

Is it in fact feasible with current technology even to get a probe into orbit around Haumea or Makemake? I'd suspect not, that the speed you need to get it out to the Kuiper belt in a lifetime is much too great to cancel down to orbital velocity.
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abbath
post Feb 22 2010, 11:32 AM
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it should be quite unfeasible to power the probe and the electric propulsion with RTG, since the power output decreases with time (power from a 238Pu source decays by about 10% per 10 years). Considering the cruise time needed to reach a KBO (with or without gravity assists), the spacecraft would reach its target with a small amount of power aveable to operate the instruments (and propulsion). IMHO, the best power source is a fission reactor.
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