Um, is it called SABRE after this book about the exact same thing?
http://www.amazon.com/Sabre-James-Fo...dp/B000S5GWIG/
Or did the project exist before the late 90s?
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Reply to: Key tests for Skylon spaceplane project
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Previously on "Key tests for Skylon spaceplane project"
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And when you're done reading what the Brits can manage with a bit of string and duct tape, here's what the Yanks are working on.
http://www.niac.usra.edu/files/studi...t/355Bogar.pdf
Big boys technology.
Basically a space elevator, but the elevator is a cable say 600 km long that spins, with the lower tip reaching down to 100 km from the surface of the Earth. Closing speed (the tip rotates counter to its orbital path) is about 3.5 km/s, which is half what is otherwise needed to get in to orbit. The payload latches on and gets slung into orbit. It can also be used in reverse for landing, and would be even more practical on the Moon.
The fundamental conclusion of the Phase I HASTOL study effort is that the concept is technically feasible ... No show-stoppers have been uncovered. Hence, all elements of the concept are in place for further development and refinement of the concept.
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I thought the concept being this sounded a bit familar - and sure enough, after consulting the all knowing oracle that is Wikipedia, this project is derived from the HOTOL project in the 1980's
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Originally posted by Scoobos View PostThis stuff blows my mind, it really does !
Despite all the negative stuff we heap on the UK, we really do seem to still produce some great inventors / scientists etc.
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Originally posted by zeitghostJet engine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scroll down to "Consumption of fuel or propellant"
Interesting variation of specific impulse in that table.
An air ejecting engine will also be most fuel efficient when it leaves the air behind it stationary wtr the ground, so that all the energy went in to moving the aircraft, which is impossible at 100% efficiency. A high volume of slow moving air would need to be ejected at slow speeds, and a lesser volume of higher speed air for higher speeds.
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This stuff blows my mind, it really does !
Despite all the negative stuff we heap on the UK, we really do seem to still produce some great inventors / scientists etc.
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Key tests for Skylon spaceplane project
BBC News - Key tests for Skylon spaceplane project
Needs more funding.
Still, if anyone can come up with a way of doing clever things on a shoe string it's the British.
Way more sensible to use the air to advantage rather than trying to escape it as fast as possible as with conventional rocketeering. Not only does the air contain half the fuel, but it provides a reaction mass too, i.e. normal jet engines can squirt air picked up out the back rather than squirt their own contents out, which they have to carry greatly adding to the weight again. If I were a passenger I'd feel safer in a rocket glider piggybacked on top of a conventional(ish) jet though.Tags: None
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