NASA Engineers Propose Combining A Rail Gun And A Scramjet To Fire Spacecraft Into Orbit

NASA has been working on creating a new, cheaper method to launch spacecrafts. Their latest proposal involves train tracks, a rail gun and a scramjet. Here’s what they’re trying to do:

In April, President Obama urged NASA to come up with, among other things, a less expensive method than conventional rocketry for launching spacecraft. By September, the agency’s engineers floated a plan that would save millions of dollars in propellant, improve astronaut safety, and allow for more frequent flights. All it will take is 3.2kms of train track, an aeroplane that can fly at 10 times the speed of sound, and a jolt of electricity big enough to light a small town.

The system calls for a 3.2km long rail gun that will launch a scramjet, which will then fly to 200,000 feet. The scramjet will then fire a payload into orbit and return to Earth. The process is more complex than a rocket launch, but engineers say it’s also more flexible. With it, NASA could orbit a 10,000-pound satellite one day and send a manned ship toward the moon the next, on a fraction of the propellant used by today’s rockets.

It may sound too awesome to ever be a reality. But unlike other rocket-less plans for space entry, each relevant technology is advanced enough that tests could take place in 10 years, says Stan Starr, a physicist at NASA’s Kennedy Space centre. NASA’s scramjets have hit Mach 10 for 12 seconds; last spring, Boeing’s X-51 scramjet did Mach 5 for a record 200 seconds. Rail guns are coming along too. The Navy is testing an electromagnetic launch system to replace the hydraulics that catapult fighter jets from aircraft carriers. “We have all the ingredients,” says Paul Bartolotta, a NASA aerospace engineer working on the project. “Now we just have to figure out how to bake the cake.”

How To Fly Into Orbit:
Rev Up The Rail Gun

A 240,000-horsepower linear motor converts 180 megawatts into an electromagnetic force that propels a scramjet carrying a spacecraft down a two-mile-long track. The craft accelerates from 0 to 1,100 mph (Mach 1.5) in under 60 seconds- fast, but at less than 3 Gs, safe for manned flight.

Fire The Scramjet

The pilot fires a high-speed turbojet and launches from the track. Once the craft hits Mach 4, the air flowing through the jet intake is fast enough that it compresses, heats to 1,650ºC, and ignites hydrogen in the combustion chamber, producing tens of thousands of pounds of thrust.

Get Into Orbit

At an altitude of 200,000 feet, there isn’t enough air for the scramjet, now travelling at Mach 10, to generate thrust. Here spaceflight begins. The two craft separate, and the scramjet pitches downward to get out of the way as the upper spacecraft fires tail rockets that shoot it into orbit.

Stick The Landing

The scramjet slows and uses its turbojets to fly back to Earth for a runway landing. Once the spacecraft delivers its payload into orbit, it reenters the atmosphere and glides back to the launch site. The two craft can be ready for another mission within 24 hours of landing.

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Discuss

(8 Comments)
  • [–]

    Zar

    Sunday, December 19, 2010 at 11:43 PM

    This is pretty much exactly the system outlined by Arthur C. Clarke in Prelude To Space (1951). Good to see technology catching up to his vision at last.

  • [–]

    Shane

    Monday, December 20, 2010 at 7:55 AM

    Can I get one for my communte to work??? At least until they perfect matter teleportation :P

  • [–]

    Nodeity

    Monday, December 20, 2010 at 10:13 AM

    I still don’t understand why they can’t get on board the SpaceShip One/Two, train. Let’s face it the US were well down this road with the X series of craft just before “JFK” screwed it with his “We choose to go to the Moon” speech! :(

    • [–]

      Kevin Russell

      Monday, December 20, 2010 at 12:17 PM

      Making use of private space craft is part of Nasa’s plan for getting astronauts into space after the shuttles get retired.

      • [–]

        Nodeity

        Monday, December 20, 2010 at 3:13 PM

        I’m not talking about the logistics of ferrying guys to the Space station! I’m talking about the technology concept of using an atmosphere type vehicle to launch a space vehicle, as in the spaceship 1/2 concept!! They were on their way to doing it with the X series before they went to the moon. :}

    • [–]

      Adrian Rundle

      Tuesday, December 21, 2010 at 2:23 PM

      they are trying to save on propellant.

      The rail gun does what the spacecraft’s mothership is doing. pretty much.

      i think. spaceshit works with -
      a) big plane get it up to height
      b) scram jetin spaceship get’s spaceship to space
      c) chem. rocket get’s it were it needs to be

      right?

  • [–]

    Tom McQuarrie

    Monday, December 20, 2010 at 11:08 AM

    I like the use of the ‘mach10′ tag, as though you’re prepping giz for a slew of other posts about the same subject. Way to look to the future giz :)

  • [–]

    Harmon Being

    Wednesday, December 29, 2010 at 10:23 AM

    The rail gun/scramjet concept is far superior to spaceship 1/2 in that it involves no pilot payroll for the “mothership,” no fuel for the “mothership,” and, with more than one spaceship, less than a 24-hour turn around time. It’s also safer, is less polluting and makes less noise (so important for those “downtown” launches.

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