I have done.Flaming_Manc wrote:
Tell me why I'm wrong, not that I'm wrong. All else is pointless if you don't actually say why I am wrong in the first place. Which you did not even attempt to do in that first block.Berster7 wrote:
No - it's pointing out you should use proper sources (not necessarily to link people to - but to educate yourself properly on the topic), not Wikipedia.
All bets are off with a Hydrogen/LOX explosion. Let alone anything else.Flaming_Manc wrote:
I used the very specific term nuclear reaction because I can't believe that you would think containing a small amount of radioactive material would be an issue when the entire purpose of the mission would be the security of the package, even before the delivery of the package. A nuclear reaction would be the circumstance when all bets are off I should think.Berster7 wrote:
You also used the very specific term nuclear reaction. Which is utterly irrelevant.
Jesus Christ can you read?Flaming_Manc wrote:
Jesus christ can you add?Berster7 wrote:
You don't seem very up to date with current NASA objectives. Within the next decade they plan to land on an asteroid and plan a manned mission to Mars by 2030.2030 - (2010+10) = 10 yearsFlaming_Manc wrote:
In the current political climate primarily because of the current economic climate going to Mars in the next ten years is completely unrealistic.
Within the next decade they plan a manned mission to an asteroid. Within the next decade is less than 10 years away.
Space elevator technology would be the only way to do it in practical terms. You can't launch all the parts for a vessel of that size individually in such a way they could be assembled in space. If that was available it would make it more possible, but still not feasible.Flaming_Manc wrote:
What technology is limiting us from making it happen?Berster7 wrote:
Why is it unrealistic? Apart from not being possible with current technology? What makes you think that we are capable of doing so? Because it would be stupidly expensive. Projects which would have costs greater than the GDP of the most prosperous nation on Earth are unfeasible any time in the foreseeable future.
You could construct it on the ground. That would be technically possible, but you couldn't do it in space. You'd also need to do shedloads of testing before you could actually construct it, which would all be very difficult and expensive.
You have inferred timeframe in several posts as responses to mine. I have consistently maintained that there could well be applications for it if you're talking in timeframes of centuries rather than decades. You have refuted those points, thereby inferring a timeframe.Flaming_Manc wrote:
Dude I went on about how politically unfeasible it is any time in the foreseeable future. Again you are trying to pin me into a time frame I have said nothing about.
You asked me for the sources I was using - those are them. Talking about this stuff got me pulling my old textbooks off the shelf and flicking through my old course notes. That's where I'm getting this information from. I'm not typing out massive chunks of text from textbooks. I've paraphrased sections from them and you've ignored it all. Because you don't listen - you just look for links to Wikipedia.Flaming_Manc wrote:
WOW now you're giving me sources without content? Is it impossible to get a claim with a source produced in juxtaposition?Berster7 wrote:
A sealed container withstand a rocket exploding lol You are optimistic. They've done tests on this and they didn't go well. Source - Fortescue P and Stark J, Spacecraft Systems Engineering.
They also touch on these principles in Wertz JR and Larson WJ, Space Mission Analysis and Design.
All the design work done worked on the principle that total containment was impossible and focused on limiting the spread of radioactive debris falling to Earth.
I've got sources. I'll give you page references and ISBN numbers if you want. I'm not trawling the internet for stuff I can already read very easily from textbooks that are of a higher quality than stuff available online for free.Flaming_Manc wrote:
fucking source? Not even making the argument yourself, but pinning the content on "many" and no source?Berster7 wrote:
Damage to pusher plates is considered by many to have too high a probability for the technology to be feasible with current engineering - the results of the Put Put tests were hardly conclusive, there were numerous failures.
How is it the main factor? Tens of trillions of dollars and you're asking how it is the main factor?Flaming_Manc wrote:
How is this the main factor? Any en devour is going to be stupidly expensive. If using nuclear pulse shaves decades off of the trip, even a cost difference on the order of magnitudes could be debated. I never said it was cheap, but technological feasibility is a hell of a lot more important than cost in getting these projects off the ground. Yes cost kills a lot of projects, but there is no point in even debating the cost of a project that is not technically viable.Berster7 wrote:
You haven't addressed the cost issue - which is the main factor.
No any endeavour will not be stupidly expensive. They'll cost a lot, a couple of billion here, a couple there - but not trillions. Certainly not tens of trillions.