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[cdn-nucl-l] " Prometheus looks to nuke future "



http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4329645.stm
Prometheus looks to nuke future  
By Martin Redfern 
BBC radio science unit  
8 March, 2005, 18:36 GMT

The US space agency (Nasa) is progressing with ambitious plans to explore
the Solar System using nuclear power. 

Their hope, eventually, is to use electricity generated by nuclear power to
propel a space probe and power its instruments on a voyage to the icy moons
of Jupiter, satellites that just possibly might harbour life beneath their
ice. 

Before then, nuclear technology could be proved with a less ambitious
mission, perhaps a nuclear-powered probe to the Moon. 

As long ago as 1907, just two years after Einstein discovered his famous
equation E=mc2 which hinted at the vast power locked within the atom, Robert
Goddard, who was himself to go on to pioneer chemical rockets, wrote: "The
navigation of interplanetary space depends for its solution on the problem
of atomic disintegration." 

Once the power of the atom bomb had been demonstrated and the Cold War set
in in the 1950s, all sorts of amazing proposals were developed for nuclear
power in space. 

Among them was project Orion, a plan to launch and propel spacecraft
weighing thousands of tonnes and carrying dozens of passengers by detonating
nuclear bombs behind a pusher plate. 

Weak solar 

Orion was cancelled when a nuclear test ban treaty came into force but
another project, Nerva, to use a nuclear reactor to produce a rocket jet was
the front runner for a possible human mission to Mars after the Apollo moon
landings. 

That, too, was scrapped and it was left to the Russians to launch several
nuclear reactors into space to power spy satellites during the 1970s. 
Dreams of nuclear power in space did not die with the collapse of the Soviet
Union and restrictions on the Nasa budget. 
Many space scientists agree that nuclear power is the only viable way of
exploring the outer Solar System. 

Using chemical rockets to move between planets and their moons is not really
practical because of the fuel mass a spacecraft would have to carry with it,
and relying on solar power to drive instruments is problematic because of
the distance from the Sun. 

Travel out to Mars and there's only a 10th as much solar energy as reaches
the Earth. 
At Saturn, it is a hundredth of the power we are familiar with. Arrays of
solar cells to produce really useful power there would be impossibly big. 

So far, probes to the outer planets, such as the Cassini craft now orbiting
the ringed planet, have used Radioisotope Thermal Generators (RTGs) - solid
state electrical generators powered by the heat of radioactive decay. But
that power is limited. 
The RTGs on Cassini would not produce enough to run a hair dryer (three
units produce about 700 watts). 

Scientists would love more electrical power for their instruments - but
there is another use for which nuclear electric power could make all the
difference: the ion engine. 

'Dustbin' size 

By using electrical energy to ionise atoms and accelerate them in a jet, it
is possible to propel them at more than 10 times the speed a chemical rocket
jet can manage. 

That means that you need less than a tenth of the propellant to travel a
certain distance. 
Already the European Space Agency has used an ion engine to take its Smart 1
craft to the Moon and an ion engine for a planned mission to Mercury is now
under test at the UK's QinetiQ's labs in Hampshire. Both use solar power,
but for deep space that is not enough. 

Project Prometheus proposes using a nuclear reactor not much bigger than a
dustbin, linked to a turbine or other generator to provide perhaps 250 kW of
power. 

Mention that to space scientists and their eyes glaze over with dreams of
the instruments they could run and the multiple destinations they could
visit. 

An ion drive might be slow - it produces a thrust little more than a human
breath - but it can keep it up for years on end and have enough puff left
over to flit between multiple destinations. 

Spare power, for example, could run radar to look for oceans beneath the ice
of Jupiter's moon Europa. It could also power a communications system that
would replace a trickle of data with a broadband flood of pictures. 

Critics such as Bruce Gagnon of the Global Network Against Nuclear Power In
Space talk of the risks of making, launching and using nuclear reactors. 

First steps 

The first project manager of Prometheus, Alan Newhouse, counters: "A reactor
would be launched shut down and never having operated, so there would be
only a very small amount of radioactivity involved. So, as a potential
danger to Earth, it's not there." 

But the engineering challenges are immense. No one has ever made a nuclear
reactor that could run for many years without human intervention. 

Reactors on Earth are all near convenient cooling systems. In space, they
would need large areas of radiator, perhaps not as large as solar arrays but
still substantial. 

Reactors for Prometheus are being developed by a US naval laboratory that
makes reactors for submarines. 

It is possible they may also learn from Russian reactors designed for space
which were sold to the US after the break-up of the Soviet Union and of
which little has been heard since. The US National Academy of Sciences has
declared a mission to Europa to be the highest priority for space science in
the next decade and the first Prometheus mission was due to be Jimo, the
Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter. 

But, explains Prometheus project manager John Casani, "people are saying
that the Jimo mission is so important, so high profile, maybe we should take
a baby step before we take that giant step. 
"So, we are looking at a mission that would be less technically challenging.
But Jimo is the crown jewel of the suite of missions we've been looking at."


The Nasa budget for 2006 includes funding to develop a test mission for
Prometheus, possibly to the Moon. That might be ready in 10 years' time and,
says John Casani, the hope would be to launch a new mission every two years
thereafter. 
They might include Jimo and then a mission to Saturn's moon Titan, glimpsed
by the Huygens probe earlier this year. 

Military mode 

There might be a mission to Neptune's moon Triton, even further from the
Sun, and the power of Prometheus might be used to support unmanned rovers
and possibly manned missions to the Moon and Mars. 

John Casani says: "My own favourite mission would be a kind of nuclear tug
boat to an asteroid." 

Sooner or later, many astronomers believe that an asteroid will be spotted
on a collision course with the Earth. 

Given several years' notice, a nuclear-powered ion-drive rocket could use
its gentle thrust to push the whole asteroid into a safe orbit without the
need or risk posed by blowing the giant rock apart. 

There will doubtless be protests and opposition to the use of nuclear power
in space. Its value for deep space probes is undeniable, but critics fear
that that could open a back door to nuclear power in space for the military
as well. 

Leo Enright investigates Project Prometheus at 21PM GMT on BBC Radio 4 on
Wednesday 9 March. The Radio 4 website will retain a recording of the
programme after transmission. 
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