News New Nuclear Engine Will Allow Deep Space Exploration - DUFF

mahdavi3d

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Researchers at NASA’s Glenn Research Center and Los Alamos National Laboratory have tested a small prototype of a nuclear-reactor engine design, which could power deep space exploration probes.

The design is based on a Stirling engine, developed in the 19th century that uses hot pressurized gas to push a piston. It would use a fifty pound nuclear uranium battery to generate heat, which would be ferried off to eight Stirling engines to generate 500 watts of power.

The test involved a pared-down prototype with a single Stirling engine that produced about 24 watts of power. Most deep space probes require 600 to 700 watts of power, so it will still take some time before an engine like this produces enough power. This is the first time that a nuclear reactor system was tested to power a spacecraft in the USA since 1965.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?&v=KobRfGqlpGc

Nuclear engines allow for the exploration of the entire solar system. Beyond Mars, sunlight is so weak that solar panels would have to be football-field-sized in order to get enough power to run a spacecraft and transmit data back to Earth.

In the past NASA used plutonium-238 to power its deep space probes, including the Voyager spacecrafts and the Cassini mission. Since the early 1980s, the US began decommissioning its plutonium production sites and by 1992 there was no way of generating new plutonium-238.

NASA’s Curiosity rover carried some of the last American plutonium to the Red Planet. In 2011, NASA and the Department of Energy received $10 million to restart plutonium production, and this should allow the generation of a few pounds of plutonium every year. A nuclear Stirling engine using uranium would reduce the dependency and demand for plutonium-238.

If created, the nuclear Stirling engine would help scientists explore the giant outer planets and all their moons and could also be used to power a robotic probe on Venus.

November 29, 2012
scitechdaily.com
 

Urwumpe

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It has to be said that this configuration (Nuclear reactor + Stirling generator) is not new, it has been already been investigated by NASA in the early 1980s as power supply for Mars or Moon bases.
 

RisingFury

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It has to be said that this configuration (Nuclear reactor + Stirling generator) is not new, it has been already been investigated by NASA in the early 1980s as power supply for Mars or Moon bases.

In today's news, yesterday's news are new...

I've seen many instances of old ideas cropping up in the news as "brand new, remarkable, ground breaking, amazing new technology,..."
 

kamaz

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It's perfectly expected that technological progress allows us to revisit ideas which were previously abandoned as unworkable.

A field effect transistor is a good example. It was conceived in 1920s, but the idea was abandoned -- because the technology of the day did not allow to manufacture it. It wasn't until 1960 that a working device was built, and that was possible only because of technological developments caused by the invention of a bipolar transistor!
 
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