Two significant problems that will affect a manned spaceflight to Mars are:
• the changes in gravitational energy
• protecting the space vehicle from high-speed electrically charged particles from
the Sun.
Use your understanding of physics to analyse each of these problems.
What do you write for the change in gravitational energy?
The sample answers wrote this:
In order to transport people to Mars the mass of them, their habitat and their spacecraft
(including fuel) must be:
1. raised from Earth’s surface into orbit around the Earth
2. raised from Earth’s orbit around the Sun to Mars’ orbit around the Sun (and placed in
orbit around Mars)
3. lowered (without crashing) from orbit around Mars to its surface
4. raised from Mars surface Mars orbit
5. lowered from Mars orbit about Sun Earth orbit about Sun
6. lowered (without crashing) from Earth orbit Earth surface
Steps 1, 2 and 4 all involve positive changes in gravitational potential energy, energy that
must be supplied by the rocket engines during these stages. Steps 3, 5 and 6 involve negative
changes in gravitational potential energy and large positive changes in kinetic energy. To
prevent crash landings this kinetic energy must be lost through friction in an atmosphere or by
braking using a forward-facing rocket engine. A significant issue is that the fuel needed for
the later steps adds to the mass that must be moved in the earlier steps (unless fuel can be
made on Mars)
Is that the only thing u have to consider?
• the changes in gravitational energy
• protecting the space vehicle from high-speed electrically charged particles from
the Sun.
Use your understanding of physics to analyse each of these problems.
What do you write for the change in gravitational energy?
The sample answers wrote this:
In order to transport people to Mars the mass of them, their habitat and their spacecraft
(including fuel) must be:
1. raised from Earth’s surface into orbit around the Earth
2. raised from Earth’s orbit around the Sun to Mars’ orbit around the Sun (and placed in
orbit around Mars)
3. lowered (without crashing) from orbit around Mars to its surface
4. raised from Mars surface Mars orbit
5. lowered from Mars orbit about Sun Earth orbit about Sun
6. lowered (without crashing) from Earth orbit Earth surface
Steps 1, 2 and 4 all involve positive changes in gravitational potential energy, energy that
must be supplied by the rocket engines during these stages. Steps 3, 5 and 6 involve negative
changes in gravitational potential energy and large positive changes in kinetic energy. To
prevent crash landings this kinetic energy must be lost through friction in an atmosphere or by
braking using a forward-facing rocket engine. A significant issue is that the fuel needed for
the later steps adds to the mass that must be moved in the earlier steps (unless fuel can be
made on Mars)
Is that the only thing u have to consider?