Ablation and deceleration of mass-driver launched projectiles for space disposal of nuclear wastes
Abstract
The energy cost of launching a projectile containing nuclear waste is two orders of magnitude lower with a mass driver than with a typical rocket system. A mass driver scheme will be feasible, however, only if ablation and deceleration are within certain tolerable limits. It is shown that if a hemisphere-cylinder-shaped projectile protected thermally with a graphite nose is launched vertically to attain a velocity of 17 km/sec at an altitude of 40 km, the mass loss from ablation during atmospheric flight will be less than 0.1 ton, provided the radius of the projectile is under 20 cm and the projectile's mass is of the order of 1 ton. The velocity loss from drag will vary from 0.4 to 30 km/sec, depending on the mass and radius of the projectile, the smaller velocity loss corresponding to large mass and small radius. Ablation is always within a tolerable range for schemes using a mass driver launcher to dispose of nuclear wastes outside the solar system. Deceleration can also be held in the tolerable range if the mass and diameter of the projectile are properly chosen.
- Publication:
-
AIAA, Aerospace Sciences Meeting
- Pub Date:
- January 1981
- Bibcode:
- 1981aiaa.meetU....P
- Keywords:
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- Ablation;
- Deceleration;
- Mass Drivers;
- Projectiles;
- Radioactive Wastes;
- Waste Disposal;
- Ablative Nose Cones;
- Convective Heat Transfer;
- Cost Effectiveness;
- Flow Distribution;
- Hemisphere Cylinder Bodies;
- Inviscid Flow;
- Radiative Heat Transfer;
- Spacecraft Design;
- Stagnation Point;
- Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer