Workingman wrote:Suff you throw out fantasy figures as if they are real - 200 launch days, 840 a year, 60,000 launches, multiple sea launches...
I am trying to give facts based on science, physics, astronomy, astrobiology, astrobotany etc. My points all stand, yours are no more than "what ifs".
OK, "what if" we had Kirk's Warp Factor Five? We could go to the Delta quadrant and kick the 5h1t out of the Cardassians, is that it? Mind you, the Romulans could come in and cloak / uncloak and screw things up.
Space travel, eh?
Real life is not Star Trek. Well I hope not. I have friend in the Theta region and she is not pleased.
Thing is this is all rooted in solid science and engineering. The problem is that you have accepted the last 50 years of doing virtually sod all except build a space station and send a few automated probes to other planets is all we can do or will ever achieve.
SpaceX comes along with the express mission of tearing down that fallacy and building a new paradigm. First they had to get to orbit. Falcon1, nearly broke the company. Second they had to get to orbit and make money. Falcon9 and NASA contracts for ISS resupply. Then they had to cut the price and increase the speed and reliability. Enter landing boosters and re-using them over and over again. Then they needed a real cash cow, not the rather unreliable government largess over the ISS. Enter Starlink and internet services which are the next best thing to science fiction.
This year SpaceX aims to launch 140 rockets to space. They are probably going to make it. These are rockets which mostly need to land their boosters on barges and take around 2 weeks to turn around and launch again.
Enter Starship. Launch from the tower, let the ship go, land on the tower again. Ship goes to LEO, does what it does then comes back and lands on the tower.
This is pure SF stuff at any other time.
You think that for SpaceX the logistics of marshalling ships and fuel and resources for 2 years ready for a 2 week launch window to Mars is unachievable? Everything they have done so far was unachievable. Honestly what is one more?
Thing is I will see this in my lifetime, given I don't expire in the next decade. I don't just need to be convinced, I will actually get to see it.
The cadence tells no lies. First launch of Starship, trashed the launch mount, lost the ship and booster in a tumble and it didn't blow up when told to. 1 year to launch. Second launch, Booster blew up after failing to boost back, ship made it to orbit and lost control, blew up. 4 months to the third launch. Third launch, Booster does everything correctly but piles in at 1000km/h instead of hovering, ship makes it to orbit and starts rolling, burns up on re-entry. Two months to the Fourth launch, booster does everything correctly and soft lands, ship does everything correctly and nearly, but does not, burn up on reentry.
Fifth launch will be around 1 month after they strip off the thousands of tiles and redo the thermal protection. They will try a booster catch on the 5th launch. If everything goes as expected with the catch and the re-entry the following launch could be one or two weeks.
Now that Artemis and SLS again? September 2025 isn't it?
Space is not just about science, it is about extreme engineering. SpaceX has it in spades.