ESAEducationESA KidsTeachers' Corner
   
About ESA Education
Education programmeInternational collaboration
Projects for Teachers
European Space Education Resource OfficeCanSats
Hands-on Projects
CubeSatsDrop Your Thesis!European Student Earth OrbiterEuropean Student Moon OrbiterFly Your Thesis!Global Educational Network for Satellite OperationsSpin Your Thesis!Previous projects
Hands-on Collaboration
REXUS/BEXUS rocket & balloon experimentsGENSO Experimental Orbital Initial DemonstrationPrevious projects
Opportunities
ConferencesCoursesGaining experienceAffiliation programme
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
 
printer friendly page
Nuclear powered rockets
 
or Swords into ploughshares
 
Page12
 
 
Many spacecraft, especially those that travel deep into the solar system, beyond the practical use of solar cells, already make use of nuclear power. They use radioactive material to heat one junction of a thermocouple and so generate electricity by the thermoelectric or Seebeck effect. This is then used to power the electrical systems of the spacecraft, rather than to provide propulsion. The amount of power generated this way though is quite low; nothing higher than around 600 W has ever been flown. In comparison ESA’s Smart 1 used solar cells to generate the 1.2 kW necessary to power the ion thrusters that carried it to the Moon.

However plans have been made to fly fully functional nuclear reactors in order to provide propulsion, as well as power some spacecraft. The simplest design just involves passing hydrogen propellant over the core of a standard, if light weight, nuclear reactor. The hydrogen propellant would then leave the reactor through the nozzle, just like a standard rocket. The exhaust would not be radioactive (in most proposed designs) but its temperature and so the specific impulse of the rocket, would be limited by the melting point of the materials used in the reactor core. A specific impulse of around 900 s might be achievable.

Animation of nuclear engines:
 
 
 
 
Page12

 
 
 


Propulsion
One day soonThe rocket principalSolid and liquid fuel rocketsThrustersIon motorsSolar sailsMagnetic sailsConclusions
Download materials
Space Basics - Propulsion (text only)
Related links
European Student Earth OrbiterEuropean Student Moon Orbiter
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2012 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.