| Re .-1 (Kaplow)
I don't think that adding payload would be a problem. I mean people are
desperate to get their stuff in orbit. If nothing else, they could take
water, as an investment in the future...
So your problems with max stresses (due to lack of payload) would never
come up.
As for were to attach the extra boosters, around the main tank of course.
That would mean a bit of a resdign of the shuttle stack, but then that is
exactly what we are talking about.
Since each shuttle launch is so darn expensive, it makes sense in sending
up as much payload as possible in each one. Adding 2 SRBs would not
increase the cost per launch that much while it may increase the payload
by as much as 60% ???
Gil
|
| Article: 45096
From: [email protected] (Brett Kottmann)
Newsgroups: sci.environment,sci.space
Subject: NASA launches and the environment (numbers provided)
Date: 23 Jun 92 09:56:25 EST
Organization: Logicon Technical Services, Inc.
Space launches are less polluting than industrial and natural
sources. Industry is sometimes less and sometimes more than natural.
(Oh, it's from Aerospace America, and not Aviation Week...)
"Current and projected launches have insignificant impact on
the global environment."
Excerpts from _Aerospace America_, May 1991.
Chemical Rockets and the Environment
====================================
Shuttle solid and liquid rocket motors inject more exhaust
products into the atmosphere than any other launcher, yet studies
indicate no significant impact on global environment.
Stratospheric O3 is continously produced in the upper
atmosphere by photolysis of molecular oxygen (O2), and is continuously
destroyed by both natural photochemical processes and by chemical
reactions with a number of species, including atomic chlorine (Cl),
atomic hydrogen (H), hydroxyl radicals (OH), and nitric oxide (NO).
These chemicals processes are interrelated, so that changes in the
concentration of any one ozone-destroying species can affect the other
processes, but all processes are catalytic; that is, the active
species emerge intact so that many ozone molecules can be destroyed by
a single atom/molecule of Cl, H, OH radicals, or NO.
Rocket exhausts produce hydrogen chloride (HCl) from solids
and water (H2O), hydrogen (H2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) from solids
and liquids. Although HCl, H2O, and H2 do not react directly with ozone,
they can be converted into reactive species, so both liquid and solid
rocket exhausts do have the potential of destroying stratospheric ozone.
The bulk of the HCl exhausted from the Shuttle's solid rocket
motors, about 65%, is deposited in the troposphere, where it is
removed by rainfall. It is not an ozone concern because it never
reaches the stratosphere. The remaining HCl, which can react with OH
in the stratosphere to produce ozone-destroying Cl atoms, is only a
small percentage of the stratospheric Cl burden when compared to
industrial and natural sources. Indeed, it would take a launch
schedule rate of 54 Shuttles and 36 Titans per year to produce 1% of
the current statospheric Cl burden.
Annual contributions (in kilotons) of statospheric Cl, H2O, H2, and
NOx by rocket launches (9 Shuttles and 6 Titans) and by other sources
(chlorine data are global, other data for nothern mid-latitudes):
Source Chlorine Water H2 NOx
==============================================================================
Industrial 300
Volcanoes 100-1,000
Natural 75 15,600 340 280
Rockets 0.79 3.25 0.2 0.016
==============================================================================
Relative importance of some ozone-depleting cycles from all sources
and from rocket launches:
Species % Ozone removal % due to rockets
==============================================================================
Nitrogen oxides 32 0.00005
Oxygen 23 0
Hydrogen/hydroxyl 26 0.0012
Chlorine 19 0.032
_________ __________
Total 100 0.034
==============================================================================
Relative contributions of 9 Shuttles and 6 Titans to deposition of
particulates in the stratosphere and their effects on ozone depletion
in the northern low to mid-latitudes:
El Chichon Natural Background Rockets
===============================================================================
Integrated surface 17,500,000 540,000 763
area (microns/m3)
Est. ozone depletion 10-17% 0.5-0.2% 0.0004-0.0007%
===============================================================================
The article was written by Allan J. McDonald (AIAA Technical
Committee on Space Transportation), Robert R. Bennett (Research Labs,
Morton Thiokol), Jerry O. Hinshaw (AIAA Technical Committee on
Atmospheric Environment) and Michael W. Barnes (Marketing Dept.,
Atlantic Research).
The above is only part of the article.
Brett---------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Why the courts don't tell a husband who has been living off his wife
to go out and get a job is beyond my comprehension."--Joan Lunden
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