'Lo all!
I've been involved in a fun discussion on another forum here.
As some might know; I'm close to finishing my first novel. It's a murder mystery in a S-F environment. I'd started that thread to ask about the feasability of the design of the ship the novel's set on and it's turned into quite an entertaining discussion.
I'm bogged down however because there is one question I can't answer. The Boom-ship Princess Astoria flies a regular run between Earth and Mars; the trip takes between 4 and 8 weeks depending on the planets' position. (Beyond that; she doesn't fly the route - it's simply not economical.) On this particular run, the journey is five weeks. Now, I imagine that in order to make it in that time the Astoria has to be going pretty mutherin' fast. If you haven't clicked the link; the idea is she burns at .5g until she reaches cruise speed, then spins herself to provide .5 gravity for the 5-week transit.
My question is how long would she need to burn at .5g in order to reach a speed that would allow her to arrive at Mars in 5 weeks? Some assumptions must be made for distance; the two planets are just a little past closest approach. Is it possible to calculate the length of that burn?
I don't know if this is necessary; but the mass of the ship is approx. 7,000 metric tonnes (I based this around 2001's Discovery; which is listed at 5440 tonnes. Princess Astoria is 30m shorter; but quite a bit more robust.) In addition; she carries about 60,000 tonnes of fuel (that's just a guess) and will arrive in Martian airspace with about 5/8ths fuel remaining.
So just to restate the question, how long would a .5g burn from Earth to Mars at near-closest approach have to be in order to arrive at Mars in 5 weeks?
Thanx!
I've been involved in a fun discussion on another forum here.
As some might know; I'm close to finishing my first novel. It's a murder mystery in a S-F environment. I'd started that thread to ask about the feasability of the design of the ship the novel's set on and it's turned into quite an entertaining discussion.
I'm bogged down however because there is one question I can't answer. The Boom-ship Princess Astoria flies a regular run between Earth and Mars; the trip takes between 4 and 8 weeks depending on the planets' position. (Beyond that; she doesn't fly the route - it's simply not economical.) On this particular run, the journey is five weeks. Now, I imagine that in order to make it in that time the Astoria has to be going pretty mutherin' fast. If you haven't clicked the link; the idea is she burns at .5g until she reaches cruise speed, then spins herself to provide .5 gravity for the 5-week transit.
My question is how long would she need to burn at .5g in order to reach a speed that would allow her to arrive at Mars in 5 weeks? Some assumptions must be made for distance; the two planets are just a little past closest approach. Is it possible to calculate the length of that burn?
I don't know if this is necessary; but the mass of the ship is approx. 7,000 metric tonnes (I based this around 2001's Discovery; which is listed at 5440 tonnes. Princess Astoria is 30m shorter; but quite a bit more robust.) In addition; she carries about 60,000 tonnes of fuel (that's just a guess) and will arrive in Martian airspace with about 5/8ths fuel remaining.
So just to restate the question, how long would a .5g burn from Earth to Mars at near-closest approach have to be in order to arrive at Mars in 5 weeks?
Thanx!
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