Manned Mars rover
Manned Mars rovers are a component of many designs for a human mission to the planet Mars.[1] For example, the Austere Human Missions to Mars proposal proposed including two rovers on its unmanned power and logistics cargo lander.[1] Each rover could hold a crew of two in a pressurized environment, with power coming from a Stirling radioisotope generator.[1]
Mars One, a Mars colonization plan intended to be funded by a TV show, plans an unpressurized manned rover capable of traveling 80 km (50 miles).[2] They said a possible supplier was Astrobotic Technology.
The Manned Mars Exploration Rover won a design award in 2010.[3] Some features included live-aboard capability, a winch, airlock, and six foam core wheels.[3] It featured modular construction so it could be assembled from smaller parts, and the suggested power source was radioisotope batteries.[3] An example of RTG use is the Cassini-Huygens spacecraft whose radioisotope power system produces several hundred watts of electrical power.[4]
It produces this amount power continuously with a slow decline over decades, and with even larger amount of heat production at the same time.[4] The electricity is produced from the heat given off by radioactive decay.[4]
See also
- Mars rover
- Human mission to Mars
- Space Exploration Vehicle
- Johnson Sea Link (a submersible with a clear sphere for viewing)
- Lunar Roving Vehicle (Manned rover of Apollo missions, used on Moon in 1970s)
References
- 1 2 3 4 NASA - Austere Human Missions to Mars
- ↑ "Is this really possible?". Mars One. Retrieved 2013-08-06.
- 1 2 3 https://www.dexigner.com/news/20096 MMER
- 1 2 3 Todd J. Barber (August 23, 2010). "Insider's Cassini: Power, Propulsion, and Andrew Ging". Saturn.jpl.nasa.gov. Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved 2011-08-20.
External links
- Von Braun rover by Colliers (1954) (Smithsonian Magazine)
- James Cameron's rover
- Manned Mars Rover plan that won design award
- spaceflight.nasa.gov
- spaceflight.nasa.gov
- Links to various Mars art including speculated human roving systems