Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
How to get to Mars
You are in charge of designing a mission to take astronauts from
Earth to Mars.
At their closest approach, the distance between
the two planets is roughly D = 80 million km.
Your rocket engineer says that he can build engines which will
accelerate the ship at a = 1 gee = 9.8 m/s2.
- Fast Flyby
- Suppose that the engines
fire at full throttle for the entire trip,
continuously accelerating the ship towards
the Red Planet.
- How long will it take to get from Earth to Mars?
Express your answer in seconds and days.
- How fast will the ship be moving when it reaches Mars?
- Fast Rendezvous
- The astronauts who read your plan complain that they
won't be able to disembark from the ship and
land safely on Mars, because the ship will be moving
too fast.
"Fine," you mutter. "I'll re-design the mission
so that the ship accelerates for half the distance,
then turns around and DE-celerates for the other half.
It will reach Mars with zero velocity."
- How long will it take to get from Earth to Mars
under this plan?
Express your answer in seconds and days.
- Finite Fuel
- Your rocket engineer comes back after a few weeks
and delivers some bad news. "We don't have an infinite
supply of fuel, so the engines can only fire for
a total of one hour."
"Ugh," you groan. "We'll have to use half the fuel
to accelerate to a top speed of vmax,
then coast at that speed until we are almost to Mars,
then turn the ship around and de-celerate so that
we hit zero speed at Mars itself."
- What is the top speed vmax under this plan?
- How far will the ship travel as it is accelerating?
- What distance will the ship have to coast before decelerating?
- How long will the entire mission take under this plan?
Copyright © Michael Richmond.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.