H2Oxide
0
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2014
- Messages
- 929
- Points
- 83
You guys won't like my answer. Not sure if I should post it.
This is a mature board. If we disagree with what you have to say, we'll discuss it. That's what the thread is for.
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You guys won't like my answer. Not sure if I should post it.
Meh.... posts are sometimes made just to poke people in the eye, for one reason or another. I don't know where a guy could be coming from with that kind of remark and not adding more.
Well I wear a tin hat myself, but not to shield myself from them, as an antenna so they can beam me up easier.
Necroing a 6 month old thread to post this? Honestly I'm tempted to -rep for this.You guys won't like my answer. Not sure if I should post it.
Perhaps if Chemical rockets weren't viable we would be motivated to find actual GOOD ways of putting things in orbit. Instead we've simply grown complacent, and depend too heavily on this dead-end technology.I keep seeing highly educated people in documentaries and videos who talk about the dream to know if there is other life in the universe, yet if you search with your eyes wide open there is evidence that they do exist and have been interacting with humanity for a very long time. There are photo's and movies of such craft from years ago before we had software to easily fake them. And the individuals who claim to have seen silently hovering craft which can zip away at speeds beyond what our own technology cannot be denied so easily, airline pilots have been fired for reporting seeing huge craft which dwarf the size of anything we have. Because of this I do not understand the disparity we have between our so called educated leaders and real world observation from credible individuals. I've been a pilot since I was in my teens and I too can be counted among those who have seen these advanced craft. Seeing is more than believing, seeing is knowing.
Must suck to live on a planet where you can't get to space using chemical rockets, or maybe it is the other way around, we suck using them as they are too expensive, requiring huge amounts of effort compared to more advanced technologies which can be used, if we were bright enough to figure it out.
Perhaps if Chemical rockets weren't viable we would be motivated to find actual GOOD ways of putting things in orbit. Instead we've simply grown complacent, and depend too heavily on this dead-end technology.
Chemical rockets are sort of like coal for power generation. They had an important role, but they really do suck, and if we cannot kind find something better we're gonna have issues accomplishing meaningful things out in space.
Well that's why I've said we would probably be better off just shelving ideas of manned space exploration until we can figure out some new techs. If chemical rockets are truly the best we can do, then we can forget about colonizing space/other worlds. It just costs too much to get stuff up there. The only way around this problem would be to manufacture stuff directly in space by harvesting asteroids or something, and we're nowhere near technologically advanced enough to do that.While there are lots of propulsion technologies that provide a higher specific impulse than chemical rockets (liquid rockets have something like 4000 m/s effective exhaust velocity while ion thrusters have something around 20,000 m/s IIRC), chemical rockets are the only thing with a high enough thrust-to-weight ratio.
So while it's far better to use things like ion thrusters in space, they just don't have the power to initially get off the ground. Other proposed launch methods such as the space gun or space elevator, while they might work, would be incredibly dangerous and/or prohibitively expensive. So, for the time being I think we're stuck with chemical propulsion.