Vacuum airship - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Interesting to note from that is that hydrogen is only 7% less efficient than a vacuum and helium is only 14%
I keep dreaming about having a point force field, expanding it to a big sphere, throwing a net around and having an instant balloon.Vacuum airship
I keep dreaming about having a point force field, expanding it to a big sphere, throwing a net around and having an instant balloon.
Rules of evil overlord specifically state that forcefield generators should be located within the forcefield they generate, and that's the type i'll order. So no way of tying the basket to the generator.If you have a forcefield and still need a net for this, you are doing your pseudo science wrong!
Right, I wasn't talking about the relative efficiency between blimps on Earth and blimps on Mars, but rather the relative efficiency between vacuum blimps and helium blimps on Mars--which I suspect would be the same as the relative efficiency between vaccum blimps and helium blimps on Earth.Wouldn't it be the other way around? If I understand buoyancy correctly, the heavier the external fluid, the more lifting power you have for any given volume of displacement (while using the same internal fluid)...
That would mean an airship (be it vacuum or conventional) would be very much less efficient on a thinner atmosphere, as on Mars, for example, since the density differential for the insides and the outsides is smaller.
Cheers
The problem is that all of your 14% goes away with the additional structure required to support a vacuum container of a size to be interesting. This isn't the case with hydrogen, which is why they used to use hydrogen in blimps, but it was experimentally determined that the safety considerations outweighed the efficiency gains.Don't kid yourself. Lunar_Lander would kill for 14%...