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The classic approach - lots of fire and smoke. Kerosene-burning engines put men on the moon, and
chemical propulsion could get you to Mars, but it'll feel like the scenic route. It's six months one way,
and your return window doesn't open for another 18. Total time away from home: 2.5 years.
It's the devil you know. Big, dumb rockets like the ones used for Apollo could have put humans on
Mars by 1990. If we want to leave soon, this is how.
Speed, or lack thereof. Chemical propulsion is slow for interplanetary distances, and after 60 years
of development, they're about as fast as they're going to get.
Star Trek was on the right track. An engine fueled by antimatter could attain 19,000 miles a second. Trips
to Mars in days or even hours are possible - if you can survive the warp-speed acceleration.
Very, very fast. With this under the hood, you just have time for a nod to the Red Planet as you
head out to Alpha Centauri.
The fuel costs more than the national debt. Not to mention that it would take 1,000 grams of
antimatter to get to Mars and current worldwide production is only about 10 nanograms a year.
Also known as nuclear thermal rockets, this has twice the performance of chemical engines. Liquid
hydrogen is pumped through the core of a reactor, and the resulting white-hot gas blasts out a nozzle
yielding plenty of horsepower.
It's build-it-and-go technology that could get you to Mars in a few months. You can even use it to
generate electricity along the way.
Mostly political. Environmental watchdogs fear contamination here on Earth.
A giant solar collector - 5 micrometers thick and 3 miles long on a side - captures the kinetic energy of
photons in sunlight, carrying the ship through the inner solar system like an America's Cup yacht.
No onboard fuel means unlimited operation. You could fly to Mars and tack back to Earth as many
times as you want.
Sunlight may be free, but it's not very high torque. Expect a leisurely cruise - a couple of years
one way - unless you use a big power laser on Earth to give it a shove.
There are several ion engines on the drawing board. The most promising for a Mars mission is nuclear
electric propulsion. Inside the unit, electrons are stripped from xenon fuel, leaving behind a swarm of
positively charged ions rarin' to go. A negatively charged grid in the back of the engine accelerates them,
creating thrust.
Fuel efficiency is so good that you can accelerate for weeks, instead of minutes, resulting in high
top speeds. You could make it to Mars in a couple of months with one of these babies.
An engine big enough for a human mission would be a major power hog. One design calls for
three nuclear reactors putting out a total of 12 megawatts, enough to power a small town.
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