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Elon Musk revealed a new plan to colonize Mars with giant reusable spaceships


Elon Musk, the billionaire founder of SpaceX, has presented an updated plan for colonizing Mars with 1 million people.
The International Astronautical Congress in Adelaide, Australia, hosted Musk's presentation on Friday, and SpaceX streamed video of the event via a YouTube Live feed.
Musk tweeted on Monday that he'd unveil "major improvements" and "unexpected applications" in the talk, which is an update to his one-hour presentation at last year's IAC in Guadalajara, Mexico — where he revealed his initial plans to build gigantic ships to reach Mars.
"The future is vastly more interesting and exciting if we're a space-faring civilization and a multiplanet species than if we're not," Musk said on Friday. "I can't think of anything more exciting than going out there among the stars."

Here are the highlights of Musk's new presentation.
Musk said lower cost was the biggest update
"I think the most important thing I'm going to convey in this presentation is that I think we've figured out how to pay for it," he said, referring to the launch system.
Musk previously called it the Interplanetary Transport System, but this year he readopted an older name:the BFR, which is short for "Big F---ing Rocket." emoticon-Ngakak (S)
"We're still sort of searching for the right name," he added.

Musk said the goal of the BFR was to "cannibalize" and replace all of SpaceX's existing launch and spaceflight systems, including its 229-foot-tall Falcon 9 rocket, the coming Falcon Heavy rocket, and Dragon (its spaceship for NASA).
"If we can do that, then all the resources that are used on Falcon 9, Heavy, and Dragon ... can be applied to this system," he said.

SpaceX is actively building and testing parts of the BFR
Earlier this year, SpaceX built a 39-foot-tall fuel tank for the spaceship made out of carbon fiber.
Engineers then put it on a barge, towed it into the ocean, and pressure-tested it to see whether it could handle the strain of holding 1,200 tons of liquid oxygen.
The test was successful — but Musk said they pushed it as far as it could go to see when it'd burst.
"It shot about 300 feet into the air and landed in the ocean. Then we fished it out," Musk said.
He added that a working carbon-fiber tank — the core of the BFR spaceship — is essential to keeping the spacecraft lightweight and efficient.
Musk also recapped SpaceX's progress on its giant Raptor rocket engines.
The new plan is to put 31 Raptor engines on the bottom of the BFR's main rocket (not 42 engines, as he said in 2016), giving it extremely powerful lift — enough to push a spaceship and 150 tons of payload into low-Earth orbit, about 250 miles above the planet.
Dozens of tests show the engines appear to work better than expected.

Musk explained how SpaceX had worked out several key technologies required to execute the Mars plan
One key technology he noted was reusable, self-landing rockets. This scheme vastly reduces the steep cost of spaceflight over time, since every other orbital launch system discards the rocket after one use.
"We now have 16 successful landings in a row," Musk said. "I think we can get to a landing reliability that is on par with the safest commercial airliners."
If that happens, Musk said, "you can count on the landing" at Mars.

He also said automated docking of spacecraft was essential, since this would allow easy refueling of the BFR in space. SpaceX has perfected this technique with its Dragon spacecraft at the International Space Station.
Dragon also gave SpaceX a chance to work on heat shields to protect the BFR's spaceship during atmospheric entry.

Musk revisited SpaceX's setbacks and progress that led toward the BFR's development
He said SpaceX almost failed as a company early on because "nobody good would join." This, he said, led to three launch failures of its early Falcon 1 system. The fourth launch worked — though if it hadn't, SpaceX would have gone bankrupt.
"Fate liked us that day," Musk said, adding that Friday was the launch's ninth anniversary.

Where Falcon 1 wasn't reusable, Falcon 9 today is about 70% reusable. Falcon Heavy — SpaceX's largest rocket system so far, and set for a debut launch later this year — is essentially three reusable Falcon 9 boosters strapped together.
The upper stages of all of these rockets aren't yet fully reusable, adding to their long-term cost. But the BFR, Musk said, is designed to be 100% reusable and able to carry five times the payload of a Falcon Heavy rocket.

New illustrations show the updated design of the BFR and its (slightly smaller) spaceship
The two-section BFR will be about 30 feet wide and 348 feet long with a weight of 4,400 tons at launch — nearly 10 times the mass of the International Space Station.
"It's really quite a big vehicle," Musk said.
The spaceship itself will stretch about 157 feet and weigh nearly 1,200 tons fully fueled.
The upper half will be dedicated to payload, where enough cargo could fit to fill an Airbus A380 airplane (which transports hundreds of people on long-distance international flights).
The fin-like delta wing on the spaceship, he added, will help stabilize the craft during launch and landing, no matter where it goes in the solar system — Earth, the moon, Mars, or even more distant worlds.
Inside, there should be room for about 40 crew cabins and 100 crew members (yes, you'd have to share a cabin), as well as a shelter from solar storm radiation, a galley, an entertainment area, and common areas.
Musk said the internal structure was designed to keep fuel from sloshing around too much and throwing the spaceship off balance during landing.
It will burn methane (CH4) with oxygen, both of which he hopes to harvest from carbon dioxide in the Martian air and water in the soil.
The Raptor engines have redundant parts, Musk said, so it could continue to land if anything fails. Even if a center engine fails, the spacecraft could get by.
"We want the landing risk to be as close to zero as possible," he said.
When a fully loaded BFR spaceship is launched, it will use most of its fuel to get into orbit around Earth or Mars — so another ship will have to supply a refill of oxygen and methane.

Though the BFR could be the largest rocket system ever developed ...
... Musk explained that its full reusability — in the long run — would build in savings and make it the cheapest to launch.
"At first glance, this may seem ridiculous. But it's not," Musk said.
He used commercial aviation as an example. A single-engine turbo-prop aircraft costs $1 million to $2 million, he said, and can't get from Los Angeles to Australia. But a 747 — while initially millions — costs about $500,000 to charter the flight and can carry hundreds of people.

"It's really crazy that we build these sophisticated rockets, and then crash them every time we fly," he said. "This is mad ... reusability is absolutely fundamental."
SpaceX may cover its Mars program's enormous costs by using it around Earth
Musk said the goal was to pour all of SpaceX's revenue, from launching satellites to ferrying astronauts to the space station, into funding the BFR.
But once the system is built and shown to work, he added, it would begin to pay for itself in other ways.


He floated the idea of launching a space telescope with a mirror 10 times the surface area of Hubble's, and "as a single unit, it doesn't have to unfold or anything," Musk said.
And in a crazier but perhaps necessary use, Musk suggested using a BFR's giant fairing and payload bay to scoop up and get rid of old satellites to prevent them from crashing into one another, which creates dangerous space debris.
"If you wanted to ... clean up space debris, you could sort of use this chomper," he said, referring to the retractable fairing at the top of the spaceship.
Musk said it was also designed to service and resupply the space station for NASA.
"I know it looks a little big," Musk said, "but the space shuttle also looked a little big."

BFR might also be good for setting up a permanent moon base
Musk has a plan to use the spaceship to do moon missions without refueling, as a crew would have to if landing on Mars.
"It's 2017. We should have a lunar base by now," Musk said. "I mean, what the hell is going on?"

Spoiler for lunar mission:


For one BFR spaceship to reach Mars, it'd have to be loaded up with the fuel from four other spaceship launches.
But with a fully expendable vehicle, the cost would be relatively small to do this.
Musk said once the first mission arrives three to six months after leaving Earth, astronauts would have to construct a propellant depot in Mars to create methane fuel and breathable air for the return trip.
SpaceX is pursuing an aggressive timeline to make the BFR a reality
The company is already performing simulations of its Mars spaceship, including slowing down in the planet's atmosphere and sticking the landing.

Musk pulled up a slide that suggests SpaceX will launch and land at least two uncrewed cargo ships on Mars in 2022. The first will seek out the best source of water, and the second will build a propellant plant.
"That's not a typo, although it is aspirational," Musk said. "We've already started building the system. The tooling for the main tanks has been ordered, the facility is being built."
He added that construction on the first ship would begin in six to nine months.
"I feel fairly confident that we can complete the ship and be ready or launch in about five years," Musk said. "Five years seems like a long time to me."

Spoiler for mars mission:


Then, in 2024, Musk said, he wants to fly four ships to Mars — including the first people to visit the red planet. From there, an increasing number of missions could establish and grow a colony.
Ultimately, Musk wants to terraform Mars and "make it a nice place to live."

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Ngeri2 sedap, akankah bangsa barat akan kembali jadi yg pertama melakukan explorasi luar angkasa
seperti dulu yg memulai explorasi samudra?
kalo dl space race pertama cepet2an nyampe ke bulan, skrg target selanjutnya ke mars bahkan sampe mengkoloni

kalo cina mau menyalib amerika, mending sekalian ngirim astronot ke mars aja jangan ke bulan lagi emoticon-Big Grinemoticon-Big Grin emoticon-Big Grin emoticon-Big Grin
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