Geolunar Shuttle
20180127114 ยท 2018-05-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
B64G1/402
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64G1/401
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64G1/62
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B64G1/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B64G1/62
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A vehicle and method enabling propulsive flight from the Earth's surface to and from the Moon's surface returning to horizontal Earth landing along an airstrip. This reusable geolunar shuttle vehicle can employ external drop tanks, and function as the final propulsive stage of a multi-stage vehicle which can be: 1) expendable, reusable or party reusable; 2) ground-launched, sea-launched, or air-launched; 3) single-launched or multiple-launched with assembly/refueling en route. The geolunar shuttle can employ axial or ventral propulsion using current operational single-fuel engines or dual-fuel engines providing enhanced system performance. The geolunar shuttle can be crewed or not, and can be internally configured to carry personnel, cargo, or a mix of both. The geolunar shuttle can optionally be used for low earth orbit and far space, including Earth escape missions.
Claims
1. A method for performing spaceflight, the method comprising: launching a reusable vehicle for traveling to the moon and returning to earth on a first launcher; launching pre-filled propellant tanks on a second launcher; and combining the vehicle and the propellant tanks in or beyond earth orbit.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the combining step is performed in low earth orbit (LEO) or moon transfer orbit (MTO).
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the amount of propellant in the propellant tanks is sufficient to enable the vehicle to land on the moon's surface, lift off from the moon's surface, and return to the earth's surface without refueling.
4. The method of claim 1 further comprising throttling throttleable engines of the vehicle during lunar descent.
5. The method of claim 1 comprising the vehicle landing in a horizontal attitude on the moon and/or earth using ventral propulsion.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the vehicle is ventrally propelled for moon takeoff and landing, and axially propelled for injection into MTO.
7. The method of claim 1 comprising operating dual fuel engines in reverse use mode.
8. The method of claim 1 comprising landing the vehicle on skids.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the first launcher and/or the second launcher comprises a Delta IV Heavy Launcher.
10. A vehicle for landing on and taking off from the moon, the vehicle comprising dual fuel engines operated in reverse use mode.
11. The vehicle of claim 10 comprising external tanks capable of holding sufficient propellant to enable the vehicle to land on the moon's surface, take off from the moon's surface, and return to the earth's surface.
12. The vehicle of claim 10 comprising one or more throttleable engines and a controllable throttling system.
13. The vehicle of claim 10 launchable from a Space Launch System (SLS), a reusable global launcher, an air launch platform, or a sea launch platform.
14. The vehicle of claim 10 wherein the vehicle is the payload of a two stage expendable launch vehicle.
15. The vehicle of claim 10 comprising ventral propulsion for horizontal attitude landing on the moon and/or earth.
16. The vehicle of claim 10 ventrally propelled for moon takeoff and landing, and axially propelled for injection into MTO.
17. The vehicle of claim 10 comprising skids for landing.
18. A vehicle for use as a booster, the vehicle comprising an aircraft launchable at sea, the aircraft having sufficient thrust to provide a 45? launch for a payload at an altitude greater than 30,000 feet.
19. The vehicle of claim 18 comprising pontoons sufficient to provide flotation for a seaplane weighing over four million pounds.
20. The vehicle of claim 18 comprising one or more rocket engines.
21. The vehicle of claim 20 comprising three tail-mounted RD-180 rocket engines.
22. The vehicle of claim 18 configured to be fueled and serviced from shipborne or submarine facilities.
23. The vehicle of claim 18 wherein the payload comprises a spacecraft, a geolunar shuttle, a ballistic missile, a cruise missile, or a drone.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and form a part of the specification, illustrate one or more embodiments of the present invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. The drawings and the dimensions therein are only for the purpose of illustrating certain embodiments of the invention and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
[0009] In the drawings:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0021] Embodiments of the present invention are vehicles for transporting personnel and/or cargo from Earth's surface to and from the Moon's surface and return to Earth. The vehicle of the present invention may or may not carry an onboard operating crew and the cargo may or may not include personnel, and is preferably capable of Earth return by horizontal airstrip landing. The geolunar shuttle vehicle is preferably configured with high fineness ratio of 7-8 for hypersonic lift-to-drag of 3-4 for maneuvering escape re-entry and horizontal airstrip landing, as described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,090,692 and 8,534,598, incorporated herein by reference. Embodiments of the present invention comprise ventral propulsion for both Moon landing/ascent and main Earth-Moon transfer; dual-fuel (oxygen/hydrocarbon/hydrogen) Moon landing/ascent as well as main Earth-Moon transfer propulsion; reverse use of dual-fuel Moon landing/liftoff engines to eliminate hydrogen boiloff during Moon surface stay; assembly/refueling during Earth-Moon transfer (3-4 days) in Moon transfer orbit (MTO); skid-type gear for both vertical Moon landing and horizontal Earth airstrip landing; and conversion to seaplane capability for air launch to expand launch flexibility. This combination has the benefits of increased performance, flexibility and reusability using existing rocket and turbofan engines; and further increased performance, flexibility and reusability using designed dual-fuel liftoff and space rocket engines.
[0022] The above proposed innovations can be incorporated into geolunar shuttle concepts which can vary widely, depending on, for example, Earth launcher, shuttle size, propulsion mode, propulsion vector, location of any in-space assembly/refueling, and/or manifest (e.g. manned/unmanned and/or cargo). These particular examples, and specific options within each of them, can be treated as ordinates of a seven-dimensional concept matrix having thousands of meaningful cells, as exemplified in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001 ORDINATE OPTIONS SUBOPTIONS Earth Launcher Ground Launch (3) Delta IV Heavy (?IVH) (3 + 2 = 5) Space Launch System (SLS) Reusable Global Launcher (RGL- see 9, 139, 311) Air Launch (2) Landplane Seaplane Size Replace Payload (P/L) (1) (1 + 1 = 2) Replace Upper Stage + P/L (1) Propulsion Mode Single-fuel (1) (1 + 2 = 3) Dual-fuel (2) Two single-fuel engines Dual-fuel engines Propulsion Vector Axial (1) (1 + 2 + 1 = 4) Ventral (2) Moon landing/take off (MLTO) Main including MLTO Axial + Ventral (1) Assembly Location None (1) (1 + 5 = 6) Multiple (5) Low Earth Orbit (LEO) Moon Transfer Orbit (MTO) LaGrange 1 (L-1) Low-Moon Orbit (LMO) Moon surface (MS) Refueling Location As above for Assembly Location (1 + 5 = 6) Manifest Multiple (3) Personnel only (3) Personnel + Cargo Cargo only (unmanned)
[0023] Ten geolunar shuttle concepts are presented herein to illustrate the diversity in this kaleidoscope of possibilities. Of the ten geolunar shuttle concepts shown, the first seven use rocket and turbofan engines which are operational (RS-25; RS-68; RL-10; GEM-60; GE90-115 B) or substantially developed (J 2X; RL and MB-60). The last three use dual-fuel engines which have been designed but not developed, a space engine (O.sub.2/MH/H.sub.2) and an Earth liftoff engine (O.sub.2/C.sub.3H.sub.8/H.sub.2).
[0024] Embodiments of the present invention comprise ventral propulsion, as shown in
[0025] Propellant feed for ventral propulsion can be accomplished by slight canting of the tanks, slosh baffles, and proper design at the end of the tank, of a collecting sump to deliver the propellants to the engines.
[0026] Embodiments of the present invention comprise a plurality of Moon landing and takeoff engines, preferably about three or four, considered reasonable in view of the fact that the Apollo program (1969-1973) accomplished six geolunar shuttle missions with only one Moon landing/takeoff engine. Also the availability of multiple shuttle engines confers flexibility to correct for engine-out situations by differential thrust through appropriate engine throttling.
[0027] Embodiments of the present invention are assembled/refueled in Moon transfer orbit (MTO), as shown in
[0028] Performance and configurations of the Delta IV Heavy launch and its upgrades, shown in
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 VEHICLE ELEMENT VEHICLE ELEMENT EXTERNAL TANKS PARAMETER CORE AT MTO AT LAUNCH Personnel (4) 1,000 ECLSS (10 days) 2,000 Mission equipment 3,000 Gross start weight, lbm 55,800 30,900 51,500 Dry weight, lbm 17,000.sup.a 1,200 2,000 Engines 3xRL10(? = 77) Re-entry planform loading, 28.7 (w/4 crew), lbm ft.sup.2 Re-entry cross range, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 .sup.aIncl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 VEHICLE ELEMENT VEHICLE ELEMENT EXTERNAL TANKS PARAMETER CORE TOP (2) SIDE (2) Personnel (4) 1,000 ECLSS (10 days) 2,000 Mission equipment 2,000 Gross start weight, lbm 54,300 30,600 96,100 Dry weight, lbm 17,500.sup.a 1,200 3,800 Engines 4xRL10(? = 77) Re-entry planform loading, 26.8 (w/4 crew), lbm ft.sup.2 Re-entry cross range, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 .sup.aIncl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 VEHICLE ELEMENT VEHICLE ELEMENT EXTERNAL PARAMETER CORE TANKS Personnel (4) 1,000 ECLSS (10 days) 2,000 Mission equipment 2,000 Gross start weight, lbm 54,300 30,600 Dry weight, lbm 17,500.sup.a 1,200 Engines 4xRL10(? = 77) Re-entry planform landing, 26.8 (w/4 crew), lbm ft.sup.2 Re-entry cross range, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 .sup.aIncl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00005 TABLE 5 VEHICLE MOON LANDER SHUTTLE WITH SLS LEO.sup.a SHUTTLE WITH PARAMETER CORE EXT. TANKS ? IV HEAVY Personnel (6: 2) 1,500 500 Env. contr/life support (10 days), lbm 3,000 1,000 Cargo, round trip 7,300 19,400 Gross start mass, lbm 223,800 524,900 157,400 Dry mass less cargo, lbm 53,500.sup.b 21,100 41,800.sup.b Engine (s) RL(orMB)-60 3 RL10(? = 77) 4 RL10B-2 2 Re-entry planform landing 23 2.5 (RT cargo), lbm/ft.sup.2 Cargo bay, ft 12 ? 18 12 ? 30 Cargo density (RT), lbm/ft.sup.3 3.6 7.9 Re-entry cross range, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 ?4,500 .sup.a220 n .Math. mi.; 28.7? .sup.bIncl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00006 TABLE 6 VEHICLE CORE VEHICLE EXTERNAL PARAMETER PERS. + CARGO CARGO TANKS Personnel (6; 2) 1,500 500 Env. contr/life support (10 days), lbm 3,000 1,000 Cargo, lbm 9,300 22,400 Gross start mass, lbm 224,600 234,300 515,600 Dry mass less cargo, lbm 52,900* 49,700 20,600 Engine RL(orMB)-60 2 2 RL10B-2 2 2 Re-entry planform loading, lbm ft.sup.2 23 16 Cargo bay, ft 15 ? 18 15 ? 30 Cargo density, lbm/ft.sup.3 2.9 (RT).sup.a 3.8 (OW).sup.b Re-entry cross range, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 ?4,500 *Incl. 15% margin .sup.around trip .sup.bone way up
[0029] For the air-launch concepts shown in
[0030] Furthermore, the seaplane can rendezvous with a submarine as well as a surface ship. If the seaplane as well as its payload is fueled at the rendezvous, it could then proceed to make a launch from any point on Earth, at any azimuth, regardless of diplomatic over flight restrictions if on a military mission. The rendezvous ship, or submarine, can transport all of the launch propellant, seaplane fuel, electronics and personnel needed to support and control a space launch, and confining these resources to shipboard should substantially reduce the bottom of the iceberg of infrastructure costs inevitably associated with the bureaucratic sprawl of land-based space launch complexes. The seaplane can be of any size and be used as a booster for less energetic missions than space launch, such as a mobile launch platform for ballistic or cruise missiles, or drones. Such a booster could also be used for space missions other than lunar landing and return. Vehicle parameters for the embodiments shown in
TABLE-US-00007 TABLE 7 GLS BOOSTER GEOLUNAR Diameter: 27.5 pt. SHUTTLE PARAMETER AIRCRAFT STAGE 1 STAGE 2 GLS Nominal payload, lbm 2,200,00 Crew 7 4 (10 days) Cargo, lbm .sup.2,000.sup.a Gross liftoff mass, lbm 4,400,000 1,714,800 403,200 83,900 Dry mass less engines, lbm 1,217,100 139,000 28,200 16,700.sup.b Engines, lbm 8xGE90-115B 154,520 3xRD-180 37,715 6xRS-25D 46,464 4XRL(MB)-60 4,400 4xRL10(? = 77) 1,500 Re-entry planform loading, lbm/ft.sup.2 26.8 Cargo bay, ft 8 ? 10 Cargo density, lb/ft.sup.3 8.0 Re-entry crossrange, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 .sup.aRoundtrip: Earth--Moon surface--Earth .sup.bIncl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00008 TABLE 8 GLS BOOSTER GEOLUNAR Diameter: 27.5 pt SHUTTLE PARAMETER AIRCRAFT STAGE 1 STAGE 2 GLS Nominal payload, lbm 2,200,200 Crew 7 4 (10 days) Cargo, lbm .sup.2,000.sup.a Gross liftoff mass, lbm 4,400,000 1,714,800 403,200 83,900 Dry mass less engines, lbm 1,217,100 139,000 28,200 16,700.sup.b Engines, lbm 8xGE90-115B 154,520 3xRD-180 37,715 6xRS-25D 46,464 4XRL(MB)-60 4,400 4xRL10(? = 77) 1,500 Re-entry planform loading, lbm/ft.sup.2 26.8 Cargo bay, ft 8 ? 10 Cargo density, lb/ft.sup.3 8.0 Re-entry crossrange, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 .sup.aRoundtrip: Earth-Moon surface-Earth .sup.bIncl. 15% margin
Dual Fuel Embodiments
[0031]
TABLE-US-00009 TABLE 9 ENGINE DUAL EXPANDER COMMON INJECTOR MODE 1 MODE 2 PARAMETER O.sub.2/MMH/H.sub.2 H.sub.2 VERSION (O.sub.2/C.sub.3H.sub.8/H.sub.2) (O.sub.2/H.sub.2) Thrust, sea level, lbf N/A N/A 666,700 N/A Thrust, vacuum, lbf 20,000/13,500 13,500 750,000 235,100 Specific impulse, sea level, sec N/A N/A 341 N/A Specific impulse, vacuum, sec 393/469 469 383.7 462.9 Chamber pressure, psia 2,700/1,800 1,800 5,000/2,500 2,500 Oxidizer:Fuel ratio 1.7/7.0 7.0 3.2/6.0 6.0 Nozzle expansion ratio 400 400 74.8/36.3 119.9 Engine dry mass, lbm Fixed nozzle 310 270 8,127 8,127 Rolling nozzle 340 300 N/A N/A
[0032] The embodiment shown in
TABLE-US-00010 TABLE 10 VEHICLE ELEMENT EXTERNAL PARAMETER CORE TANKS Personnel (4) 1,000 ECLSS (10 days) 2,000 Mission equipment 2,000 Gross start weight, lbm 64,700 30,600 Dry weight, lbm 18,200* Engines 4xO.sub.2/MMH/H.sub.2 1,200 Re-entry planform loading, 26.8 (w/4 crew), lbm ft.sup.2 Re-entry cross range, n .Math. mi. ?4,500 *Incl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00011 TABLE 11 VEHICLE REUSABLE GLOBAL GEOLUNAR PARAMETER LAUNCHER SHUTTLE Payload capability.sup.a, lbm 302,000 (nom.) Crew (6), lbm 1,500 Mission equipt., lbm 1,000 Gross liftoff mass, lbm 7,305,318 301,001 Dry mass less engines.sup.b, lbm 368,460 30,841 Engines (lbm) 8xRD-180 48,060 6xRS-25 43,218 4xDF(O.sub.2/MMH/H.sub.2); F.sub.vac = 13.5 Klbm 1,360 Re-entry planform loading, lbm/ft.sup.2 30.1 17.1 Return glide downrange, n .Math. mi. (global) (global) Return glide crossrange, n .Math. mi. ?3,500 .sup.a50 ? 100 n .Math. mi., 28.7?; .sup.bIncl. 15% margin
TABLE-US-00012 TABLE 12 VEHICLE GEOLUNAR SHUTTLE REUSABLE GLOBAL LAUNCHER DROP PARAMETER CORE CORE TANKS (2) Payload capability.sup.a, lbm 735,000 (nom.) Crew (2), lbm 500 Cargo, Earth.fwdarw.Moon.return, lbm 50,000/35,000 Gross liftoff mass, lbm 7,099,778 2,731,305 726,866 408,076 Dry mass less engines.sup.b, lbm 382,430 109,900 51,270 15,318 Engines, lbm 19xDF/DX(O.sub.2/C.sub.3H.sub.8/H.sub.2); F.sub.sl = 750 Klbm 154,473 4xDF(O.sub.2/MMH/H.sub.2); F.sub.vac = 13.5 Klbm 1,870 4xDF(O.sub.2/H.sub.2 version); F.sub.vac = 19 Klbm 1,650 Re-entry planform loading, lbm/ft.sup.2 31.8 14.1 Cargo bay, ft 15 ? 40 Cargo density, lbm/ft.sup.3 7.1/5.0 Return glide downrange, n .Math. mi. (global) (global) Return glide crossrange, n .Math. mi. ?3,500 ?4,500 .sup.a50 ? 100 n .Math. mi., 28.7?; .sup.bIncl. 15% margin
[0033] Embodiments of the geolunar shuttle of the present invention preferably utilize controllable throttling. To attain descent and ascent trajectories through the lunar gravity field, and soft landing at a precisely selected target site, the vehicle preferably comprises specialized electronic hardware and software to control throttleable main engines, such as the RL10-B2. There is preferably a provision for manual override for emergencies, and the system preferably enables final adjustments during touchdown. A controllable throttling system is typically not needed for vehicles not landing on the moon.
[0034] Although the invention has been described in detail with particular reference to the disclosed embodiments, other embodiments can achieve the same results. Variations and modifications of the present invention will be obvious to those skilled in the art and it is intended to cover all such modifications and equivalents. The entire disclosures of all patents, references, and publications cited above are hereby incorporated by reference.