*Just a few hours ago very a interesting documentary about project Orion
was posted on YouTube: *

*Earth to Mars in 10 Days*
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EVwlTsa9oMM&t=1459s>

*I've been fascinated by this idea for years, back in 1998 I posted the
following to the old Extropian list, the video contains some details that I
didn't know then because they were still classified top-secret in 1998:*
*===*

*I've been reading a little about an incredible idea taken very seriously
in the late 50's and early 60's but today is almost completely forgotten,
it was called Project Orion. The idea was to make a spaceship big enough
for 150 people and all the equipment they could ever want and blast it into
space. They wanted to make it 135 feet in diameter and 160 feet high and
they wanted most of that space to be usable by people not wasted on fuel.
They figured weight would be no problem, if a crew member wanted to bring
along his antique bowling ball collection and his own personal barber chair
there would be no objection. The advocates of this approach were not
interested in low Earth orbit or even the moon, they were certain they
could be on Mars by 1965 and Saturn by 1970, the leader of the project was
determined to visit Pluto. And they figured all this would cost less than
10% what the Apollo moon project did.*

*You might think that these people must have been a bunch of crackpots, but
it's not so. Nobel Prize winners Niels Bohr, Hans Bethe and Harold Urey
were all enthusiastic advocates of the idea. Freeman Dyson thought the idea
was so brilliant that he took a one year leave of absence from the
prestigious*
*Institute of Advanced Study so he could work full time on the project.*

*Yes, there is a catch, Project Orion needed nuclear energy, even worse it
needed nuclear bombs. The Orion spacecraft would contain 2000 nuclear
bombs, most in the 20 kiloton range, the size of the bomb that destroyed
Nagasaki. A bomb in a tank of water would shoot out the back of the ship,
when it was 100 feet away it would explode, the water would hit a carefully
designed 75 ton pusher plate and accelerate the ship. Between the pusher
plate and the ship were 50 foot long gas filled shock absorbers to even out
the jerk. They wanted everything to be as cheap as possible, so they asked
the Coca-Cola company for the blueprints of one of their vending machines,
then they scaled it up a little and planned to use it as the mechanism to
dispense the bombs.*

*The pusher plate was obviously the most important part of the design. If
you explode a powerful bomb near a circular plate of constant thickness it
will shatter because of the uneven stresses that build up, but it turns out
that if you carefully taper the plate and make certain that the explosion
is dead*
*center, the plate will be extraordinarily resistant to damage. A layer on
the plate will be vaporized by the heat but if some heavy protective oil is
sprayed on it before each use it would be good for 2000 blasts. This beast
was tough, if it was properly oriented the Orion Spacecraft could survive a
16 megaton H bomb blast from only two thousand feet away, a fact of more
than passing interest to the military. Orion needed lots of radiation
shielding to protect the crew, but weight was never an issue so this was no
problem.*

*Wernher von Braun thought all this was a dumb idea, then he saw a movie of
the launch of a one meter working model of Orion that shot 6 carefully
timed high explosives chemical bombs out the back of the model, it rose 300
feet into the air in stable controlled flight. Wernher von Braun became a
vocal*
*supporter of project Orion.*

*They planned to launch Orion from atop eight 250 foot towers in Jackass
Flats Nevada. The first bomb would be tiny, just .1 kiloton (100 tons of
TNT) exploded 100 feet below the craft and 150 feet above the ground, then
a new and slightly larger bomb would be spit out the back every second for
50 seconds, the last bomb would be the largest, 20 kilotons, and by then
the craft would be out of the atmosphere, the total yield of the 50 bombs
would be 200 kilotons. The launch would have been a spectacular sight, it'd
make the Space Shuttle look like a bottle rocket.*

*Project Orion was led by Ted Taylor, a mediocre physicist but a good
inventor. Taylor had one unique talent, he has been called by some the best
nuclear weapon engineer on planet Earth and the Leonardo da Vinci of
nuclear bomb design. Taylor is the man who figured out how a two foot long
200 pound bomb could be made as powerful as the 12 foot long 10 ton World
War 2 Nagasaki bomb. The reason the Orion spaceship was so much bigger and
faster than anything we have today is that pound for pound such bombs have
about a million times as much energy as any chemical rocket fuel.*

*Orion wasn't the only thing Taylor was interested in, he found a way to
make a new type of nuclear bomb, one that would produce a highly
directional blast. He designed a little one kiloton bomb that could blast a
1000 foot tunnel straight through solid rock, he wanted to build a cheap
tunnel between New York and San Francisco and have a supersonic subway 3000
miles long.  *

*Considering the big controversy we had last year when a deep space probe
was launched with just a few pounds of non weapon grade Plutonium on it to
power the electronics it may seem incredible and irresponsible that anyone
would even consider something as environmentally unfriendly as Orion, but
we live in a very different world. At the time Orion was under serious
study the USA was blowing up one megaton bombs deep under the sea and 300
miles in space and the USSR was blowing up 57 megaton bombs in the
atmosphere, Orion seemed and indeed was pretty benign compared to that.*

*It all came to nothing of course, in 1963 the test ban treaty was signed
stopping all nuclear explosions in space or the atmosphere making Orion
illegal. The project died, but to this day most say it would have worked
technologically if not politically.*

*Idea for a science fiction novel: A huge nickel iron asteroid is heading
for Earth, it would take a 8 gigaton bomb to divert it but no existing
rocket is nearly powerful enough to deliver such a huge payload to the
asteroid. The Earth seems doomed, then our hero remembers Project Orion.*

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*

n']

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