As NASA’s Perseverance rover homes in on the Red Planet, engineers on the ground are furthering potential propulsion technologies for the first human missions to Mars. NASA is looking at two types of nuclear propulsion systems – nuclear electric and nuclear thermal propulsion.
Nuclear electric propulsion systems use propellants much more efficiently than chemical rockets but provide a low amount of thrust. They use a reactor to generate electricity that positively charges gas propellants like xenon or krypton, pushing the ions out through a thruster, which drives the spacecraft forward. Using low thrust efficiently, nuclear electric propulsion systems accelerate spacecraft for extended periods and can propel a Mars mission for a fraction of the propellant of high thrust systems.
Illustration of a Mars transit habitat and nuclear propulsion system that could one day take astronauts to Mars. Credits: NASA
Nuclear thermal propulsion technology provides high thrust and twice the
propellant efficiency of chemical rockets. The system works by transferring
heat from the reactor to a liquid propellant. That heat converts the liquid
into a gas, which expands through a nozzle to provide thrust and propel a
spacecraft.
NASA, in coordination with the Department of Energy (DOE), is asking industry for preliminary
reactor design concepts for a nuclear thermal propulsion system. The agencies
plan to fund several efforts to explore different approaches. Future follow-on
contracts will generate more detailed reactor designs and build preliminary
testing hardware.
“While NASA’s immediate priority is returning humans to the Moon with
the Artemis program, we are
also investing in ‘tall pole’ technologies that could enable
crewed missions to Mars,” said Jim Reuter, associate administrator of NASA’s
Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD). “We look forward to seeing what
innovations industry offer in nuclear propulsion as well as fission surface
power via a forthcoming request for proposals for that technology."
Human Missions to Mars
To date, only robotic explorers have traveled to Mars, without the need for
returning to Earth. Waiting for optimal planetary alignment for the return trip
would require astronauts to loiter at Mars for more than a year, stretching the
round-trip mission to more than three years.
NASA’s goal is to minimize the time the crew travels between Earth and Mars
to as close to two years as is practical. Space nuclear propulsion
systems could enable shorter total mission times and provide enhanced
flexibility and efficiency for mission designers.
To keep the round-trip crewed mission duration to about two years, at a
minimum, NASA is looking at nuclear-enabled transportation systems to
facilitate shorter-stay surface missions. The systems would take advantage of
optimal planetary alignment for a low-energy transit for one leg of the trip
and the new technology’s enhanced performance to make the higher-energy transit
for the other leg.
It’s too soon to say what propulsion system will take the first astronauts
to Mars, as there remains significant development required for each approach.
Illustration of a spacecraft with a nuclear-enabled propulsion system. Credits: NASA
Technology Readiness
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, leads the
agency’s space nuclear propulsion project in partnership with a DOE team that
includes scientists and engineers from Idaho National Laboratory, Los Alamos
National Laboratory, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. STMD’s Technology
Demonstration Missions program funds the technology development.
Nuclear electric
propulsion builds on NASA’s work maturing solar electric propulsion thrusters and
systems for Artemis, as well as the development of fission power for the lunar
surface. Significant investment has also been made in relevant fuel and reactor
technologies for small, terrestrial reactors that could be adapted to space
reactors to power electric propulsion. The U.S. government’s aim to establish a
fuel fabrication capability has a range of applications, including nuclear
propulsion and fission surface power.
The Nuclear Thermal Rocket Element Environmental Simulator at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, tests nuclear rocket fuel prototypes using non-nuclear heating instead of fission. Credits: NASA/Mick Speer
Nuclear thermal propulsion has been on
NASA’s radar for more than 60 years. The new hardware design and development
phase pursued through a request for proposals released Feb. 12, 2021, builds on
existing efforts to mature crucial elements of a nuclear thermal propulsion
system.
NASA, in partnership with DOE, is developing and
testing new fuels that use low-enriched uranium for space applications to see
how they perform under the extreme thermal and radiation environments needed
for nuclear thermal propulsion. NASA is working closely with DOE, industry, and
universities to put fuel samples in research reactors at Idaho National
Laboratory's Transient Reactor Test (TREAT) facility and the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology Nuclear Reactor Laboratory for nuclear testing. The
team is also performing non-nuclear testing in simulated reactors at Marshall
test facilities.
“The reactor underpinning a nuclear thermal propulsion
system is a significant technical challenge due to the very high operating
temperatures needed to meet the propulsion performance goals,” explained
Anthony Calomino, NASA’s nuclear technology portfolio lead within STMD.
While most of the engine operates at modest
temperatures, materials in direct contact with the reactor fuel must be able to
survive temperatures above 4,600 degrees Fahrenheit. NASA and DOE have been
working with industry on a viable approach, and industry will now develop
preliminary designs to meet this challenge.
Technology Infusion
“We’re exploring both nuclear electric and nuclear
thermal propulsion options for crewed Mars missions,” Calomino said. “Each
technology has its unique advantages and challenges that need to be carefully
considered when determining the final preference.”
Whichever propulsion system is ultimately chosen, the
fundamentals of nuclear propulsion can enable robust and efficient exploration
beyond the Moon. NASA will continue to develop, test, and mature various
propulsion technologies to reduce risk and inform the Mars transport
architecture.
Clare Skelly
Headquarters,
Washington
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/spacetech/nuclear-propulsion-could-help-get-humans-to-mars-faster
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