Editing GPIS 10: I Was Just Wondering
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You may know from chapter 9 that Orbiter allows you to install and fly add-ons for all sorts of realistic spacecraft, from historic unpiloted satellites and probes to Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and the Space Shuttle (and even more when you consider available Russian spacecraft). “Realistic” is cool, but it is also limiting. These are all “early” spacecraft, though based on technology that was the best in the world at the time they were designed (even the Shuttle is “early” – it was designed in the 1970’s). They typically have just enough fuel and payload to fly their specialized missions, and not much more (even the general-purpose Shuttle has a pretty narrow mission, “fly a cargo to low Earth orbit”). With weaker engines, they typically need multiple stages (see General Space Flight Questions), which makes them more complicated and expensive to operate. | You may know from chapter 9 that Orbiter allows you to install and fly add-ons for all sorts of realistic spacecraft, from historic unpiloted satellites and probes to Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and the Space Shuttle (and even more when you consider available Russian spacecraft). “Realistic” is cool, but it is also limiting. These are all “early” spacecraft, though based on technology that was the best in the world at the time they were designed (even the Shuttle is “early” – it was designed in the 1970’s). They typically have just enough fuel and payload to fly their specialized missions, and not much more (even the general-purpose Shuttle has a pretty narrow mission, “fly a cargo to low Earth orbit”). With weaker engines, they typically need multiple stages (see General Space Flight Questions), which makes them more complicated and expensive to operate. | ||
− | To do much better than this requires advanced materials (super strong but light weight and heat resistant) and advanced engines that can provide more thrust for longer periods with less fuel. Such things are not prohibited by the laws of physics – they are under development but don’t exist yet, except in the form of | + | To do much better than this requires advanced materials (super strong but light weight and heat resistant) and advanced engines that can provide more thrust for longer periods with less fuel. Such things are not prohibited by the laws of physics – they are under development but don’t exist yet, except in the form of “fictionalbutphysicallyrealistic”simulatedcraftsuchastheDeltaGlider. Suchcrafthavebeenstudied under the name “single stage to orbit” (SSTO), and we will have them eventually. In the meantime, they are simpler to operate in Orbiter, and they still teach you all the right stuff. |
'''Isn’t it cheating to use slowed-down time?''' | '''Isn’t it cheating to use slowed-down time?''' | ||
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|style="text-align:right" width="33%" |[[GPIS_Epilog|Epilog: Your Future In Space]] | |style="text-align:right" width="33%" |[[GPIS_Epilog|Epilog: Your Future In Space]] | ||
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