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Metallic hydrogen and refueling

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dare dare's picture
Metallic hydrogen and refueling
Quick question, in case somebody has already thought about this: How is metallic hydrogen stored and moved around? My scenario has the PCs trapped on a small space station. They come across a GEV that's unfueled, and the infrastructure around it is partly intact, partly not. There's probably metallic hydrogen around somewhere, and the PCs are going to need to fuel their craft and get out (while other things happening around them are making this difficult). So ... how exactly does the refueling work? I'd like to know what exactly the player characters are attempting to do while Other Things do their damndest to kill them. Is the metallic hydrogen in small, pressurized containers that are moved by hand / drone? Is it in a big tank somewhere, and the refueling is done by pipes (and do the pipes need to be able to handle a couple of million bar of pressure)? How much of the stuff does a GEV take? (According to EP Naval Strategy docs, a fully loaded GEV has a mass of 5.5 tons, and an empty one 3 tons - how much of this is fuel?)
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DivineWrath DivineWrath's picture
The quick answer is that we
The quick answer is that we don't know. Metallic hydrogen hasn't been successfully produced yet. Its a fancy science fiction material, like antimatter for the warp drive. The long answer is I'm finding it hard to get good information on it using the internet. Its a work in progress. I checked the book, and it says on (core rulebook, p. 347) that it is a solid and is kept stable in a controlled electromagnetic field. Each tank has the required components for this field. By weakening the field near the exhaust point, a small amount is explosively turns back into normal hydrogen.
UnitOmega UnitOmega's picture
DW said it best. Like how
DW said it best. Like how several technologies work in EP, we know that they could be a thing, and roughly how that would work, but obviously if we knew how to go from A to B, we'd probably have it already. Based roughly on the tech as described, I assume refueling moves stored MH in a holding tank to the tank on the ship. All of this would require very delicate magnetic containment along the way - so this will be as rugged as can be built, but if exsurgents with monkey wrenches bang on stuff too much, you'll break containment and high pressure hydrogen will violently rush out. And god forbid you have, like, an open flame somewhere. If, say, the normal lines from the holding tanks to the ship are broken, they'll have to rig something, which means they might just get a straight up equipment failure, no monkey wrenches. There are probably safeties in place to prevent cascading failures, but you never know, maybe those are broken.
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Trappedinwikipedia Trappedinwikipedia's picture
Metallic hydrogen is solid,
Metallic hydrogen is solid, so something more like a bunch of solid rocket booster tubes than a fuel tank makes the most sense. I imagine each tube would have its own power source and such. Dry and fully laden masses are fuel fraction, so a GEV has 2.5 tons of MH fuel. That said, a flame is the least of your worries when it comes to a leak. Metallic hydrogen expands several thousand times when it becomes gaseous hydrogen, and does this so fast it is an explosion. It's an explosive 35 times more powerful than TNT. (That makes a GEV's fuel supply a ~90 ton TNT bomb, or two FOABS at the same time) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Father_of_All_Bombs
ShadowDragon8685 ShadowDragon8685's picture
Moving and transferring the
Moving and transferring the stuff would be... Pretty challenging. Perhaps the fuel tanks themselves are interchangable - IE, hydrogen is compressed into MH [i]inside[/i] the fuel tank into which it is being transferred, and this is then treated like a solid rocket fuel "cell" that can be moved in one discrete unit, plugged in above the rocket motor? In which case, the proper equipment for fuel transfer would consist of a forklift truck and/or a Daitya morph. (Or, you know, fuel handling armatures and such.) It would also suggest that fuel tanks themselves are not-infrequently recycled and refactored in the fueling bays, since the fuel tank that went into that Autonomist-made GEV probably isn't the same one that goes into a hypercorp-made SLOTV. Alternatively, you use varying magnetic fields to [i]carefully[/i] decompress MH into liquid hydrogen, pump it into the fuel tank and compress it again. Frustratingly, I could envision [i]both[/i] approaches being used by different manufacturers, so your players should RTFM before they go to the trouble of securing the fuel pumps and pipes, only to find out that they could have/need to have gone and manufactured an empty tank to-spec, filled it, and moved it with a Power Loader.
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DivineWrath DivineWrath's picture
I had some time to absorb
I had some time to absorb what I've learned and think things over. Saying we don't know doesn't solve your problem. How about for the sake of plot, the tanks can be removed in 5 minutes, refilled in 30 minutes, and put back on the ship in another 5 minutes. The tanks might explode if hit by stray bullets or an emp charge. The tanks probably have some armor to protect it from space rocks and stuff, so they might survive a hit or two. Nonetheless, you don't want to risk a firefight near them. Long term storage will need power to maintain an electric field containment. That, or they would need really good tanks that can keep things sealed up without power. Alternatively, they don't store metallic hydrogen long term and instead store a lot of hydrogen ready for processing. Maybe give the facility a day to make enough metallic hydrogen to refuel the ship. Is there anything else you need?
dare dare's picture
DW: That only kind of solves
DW: That only kind of solves the problem - I prefer my approach to be world-oriented, not scenario-oriented. That's why I'm looking for a world-consistent way for the metallic hydrogen storage & transport to work, so that it'll work the same way the next time the same thing comes up, and that I have a bit of an explanation on how the tech works, in case someone comes up with something unexpected. Lots of good ideas in here so far. I don't think the hydrogen will be compressed in real-time - the energy required for that kind of operation would be humongous. It's going to be pre-compressed fuel tanks, now I'll just have to decide what size they are and what kind of safety measures they utilize. Accidents will happen.
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nostromo1a1 nostromo1a1's picture
compressed hydrogen
compressing is easy, you have heard of air conditioning right? basically a compressor adds pressure and heat then this gas goes to a heat exchanger where the heat is rejected and the gas turns liquid while being under pressure same idea just depends on how it would need to be done such as what pressure and heat exchange are necessary.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
It is stated that metallic
It is stated that metallic hydrogen is kept stable through the use of electromagnetic fields. (Main Rules p. 347). Because of that I came up with the following concept of metallic hydrogen and how it is stored and used on ships: Metallic hydrogen for ships is typically stored in curved plates. The standard plate is a common length (I never really decided on a length but as an example we could say that all plates are 25 cm long) with a more or less common arc (my idea was somewhere in the neighborhood of 55 degrees). The radius of the plates would vary by the thickness of a standard plate so as an example if a standard plate was 1 cm thick then you would have plates with a radius of 4 cm, 5 cm, 6cm, etc. What this all means is that if you stack up a bunch of plates you would get a chunk of metallic hydrogen that looks like 1/6th of a cylinder 25 cm tall (assuming 25 cm was our standard length). The ultimate diameter of the cylinder would depend on how many plates were used and the size of the innermost plate (you would never use all the 'inner' plates although whichever was the innermost plate would vary depending on the size of the engine). Six of these stacks would make up a 'ring' and multiple rings would make up the entire engine. This means that a wide variety of engine configurations can be built using these standard plates just by varying the precise plates used to create a ring and the number of rings in the engine. So for refueling my take is that a ring or series of rings is stored in a 'sleeve' that includes the EM generators necessary to keep the metallic hydrogen stable. You're probably looking at redundant systems along with a physical design that will 'fail safe' as the final safety (the sleeve wouldn't be strong enough to prevent the hydrogen from expanding but it is strong enough to prevent uncontrolled expansion and then vents pressure so that instead of the metallic hydrogen sublimating in a fraction of a second in a huge shockwave it sublimates over several minutes). This is probably almost identical to the general construction the fuel tank/motor except that it lacks nozzles to focus the escaping hydrogen into thrust. So while a 'sleeve' could be damaged badly enough to explode it isn't any more likely to happen from a stray bullet than it is for a metallic hydrogen engine to explode from a stray bullet. It would probably take either criminal negligence on the part of the handlers or else deliberate sabotage. Refueling would be accomplished by moving aside the engine's nozzle, pressing the end of the sleeve up against the opening to the engine, then opening the top of the sleeve and pushing the plates into the engine. Stability of the hydrogen would be maintained by the field generated by the sleeve and the field generated by the fuel tank/engine and not by pressure. While it sounds like that can be done quickly it probably takes time to make sure that the two overlapping fields are working together. You will also have an issue with removing the old remaining plates if they exist. How long it takes to refuel probably varies really widely depending on circumstances. For instance I would imagine that smaller military vessels are probably designed so that remaining hydrogen can be dumped/vented quickly in combat conditions (time being much more critical than fuel recovery at that point). Because you would have a very small number of likely configurations you could have 'sleeves' sitting around designed for those specific craft. Because the possible field generators is a small set of military grade equipment and because under combat conditions you don't follow the same safety protocols of civilian agencies the military can probably slam a new load of fuel into one of those ships pretty quickly. On the other hand if you are recovering unused plates to minimize operations costs and you need to have a new set of plates assembled for your ship because your ship is one of a thousand different designs you are probably looking at leaving your ship somewhere while you go out and get something to drink, maybe have some dinner and get some sleep in a bed that isn't in a ship's cabin. Of course none of this is official. It's just my best guess based on the description of the drives in the rules, my very limited knowledge of rocket motors, and my assumptions on practices and procedures. I'm also simplifying some of the design elements such as omitting components that help align the plates and keep them together because while I'm sure they exist they are not necessary for this level of theorizing.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
nostromo1a1 wrote:compressing
nostromo1a1 wrote:
compressing is easy. . .
It's easy in theory. It's also easy, in theory, to turn coal into a diamond, just compress it and heat it. It still takes an awful lot of equipment, and the pressure to turn coal into a diamond is a small fraction of what is needed to create metallic hydrogen. To the best of my knowledge we have never created even the smallest traces of metallic hydrogen, but we've created plenty of diamonds. Honestly, if it wasn't for the fact that the people in Eclipse Phase can use electromagnetic fields to stabilize metallic hydrogen I don't really see how they could use it on any real scale. The material technology that would be required would mean that ships would be nearly indestructible, body armor would shrug off massive rounds (although energy transfer to the guy inside might still be be a problem) and all sorts of other things should probably be happening that we aren't seeing in the setting.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Trappedinwikipedia Trappedinwikipedia's picture
nostromo1a1 wrote:compressing
nostromo1a1 wrote:
compressing is easy, you have heard of air conditioning right? basically a compressor adds pressure and heat then this gas goes to a heat exchanger where the heat is rejected and the gas turns liquid while being under pressure same idea just depends on how it would need to be done such as what pressure and heat exchange are necessary.
That's kind of like saying going to orbit is easy because you can jump a foot in the air. 30 PSI air conditioning and 500 megabar compression are significantly different. (More than 100 million times as much pressure) I really like bent plates being used for building rocket engines. I was thinking the housing for MH fuel needed to be a lot closer but I like that idea, especially as MH might be metastable, so you could just use the plates alone, without stabilizing fields.
kigmatzomat kigmatzomat's picture
Lazarus wrote:It is stated
Lazarus wrote:
It is stated that metallic hydrogen is kept stable through the use of electromagnetic fields. (Main Rules p. 347). Because of that I came up with the following concept of metallic hydrogen and how it is stored and used on ships: Metallic hydrogen for ships is typically stored in curved plates. ...
I like your idea. Change it from rings to a spiral wrapped around a series of cylinders. The fuel chamber rotates, moving the fuel "down" the engine, towards the rear thrusters, like a screw drive. The magnetic containment is in both the cylinders and the outer housing. A diverter splits of sections of fuel to move into the combustion chamber. That allows for physical baffles to move into place as well as magnetic ones to separate the thrust chamber from the rest of the fuel. Refueling could occur from either end, as a fresh fuel cyclinder/shell is aligned with the ship and diverters channel the fuel into place.
I'm not rules lawyer, I'm a rules engineer.
DivineWrath DivineWrath's picture
dare wrote:DW: That only kind
dare wrote:
DW: That only kind of solves the problem - I prefer my approach to be world-oriented, not scenario-oriented. That's why I'm looking for a world-consistent way for the metallic hydrogen storage & transport to work, so that it'll work the same way the next time the same thing comes up, and that I have a bit of an explanation on how the tech works, in case someone comes up with something unexpected.
Unfortunately, the books are quite lite on "world-oriented" details. Unless the books specializes on the topic, like gate crashing, don't expect much specifics. The books tends to do things abstract, like prices for stuff being in price categories, like [Low] being 250 cr, and [Expensive] being 20,000 cr. Or how fabrications times in nanofabs being 1 hour * price category. Annoying I know, but its what we have to work with.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
kigmatzomat wrote:.I like
kigmatzomat wrote:
.I like your idea. Change it from rings to a spiral wrapped around a series of cylinders. The fuel chamber rotates, moving the fuel "down" the engine, towards the rear thrusters, like a screw drive. The magnetic containment is in both the cylinders and the outer housing.
I'm not sure a helical design would be the way to go. If there is much benefit I can't see it outweighing the additional complications. That could be because of something below.
Quote:
A diverter splits of sections of fuel to move into the combustion chamber. That allows for physical baffles to move into place as well as magnetic ones to separate the thrust chamber from the rest of the fuel. . .
The problem is that I don't think there is any real 'combustion chamber'. To my mind a metallic hydrogen engine is just a solid rocket motor, kind of like the kind that people use for small scale model rockets, with two primary differences. The first difference is that the motors used by the small scale rockets incorporate their own ceramic nozzle. That's great when you're dealing with a toy where the worst think that will happen if the nozzle fails is that a toy blows up. Metallic hydrogen engines are much, much bigger and if there's a catastrophic failure people could effectively die (maybe their stacks aren't destroyed but if a grape sized stack is sent off in a random direction at high speed out in space in the middle of a cloud of debris there's a real good chance it will never be recovered). Additionally the thrust from a metallic hydrogen motor can be varied so the nozzle will probably need to be able to vary its profile as well. Much bigger, much more complicated, and with higher cost of failure means that those nozzles are probably far too expensive to be disposable and are probably part of the ship rather than coming with the fuel. The second difference is that the fuel in a model rocket is ignited. When that happens the chemicals in it combine and turn into gas which then escapes from the nozzle and provides thrust. In the case of a metallic hydrogen engine all that really happens is the electromagnetic fields are selectively relaxed and the metallic hydrogen turns back to gaseous hydrogen. Because this is being done by relaxing a field it is more controllable then a solid chemical rocket, but otherwise the pattern of 'fuel' use (in the case of a solid chemical rocket the chemical is technically both fuel and remass and in the case of a metallic hydrogen rocket the hydrogen is technically purely remass, I believe, which is why I'm using fuel in quotes) is probably similar in both cases. Both of them would have a general design where the contents closest to the nozzle and the inside of the cylinder are consumed first and then consumption spreads out from there. Iin the case of a solid chemical rocket the pattern is based purely by how the heat spreads while in the case of metallic hydrogen it would be controlled by a combination what the most efficient way to utilize the metallic hydrogen is combined with whatever limitations might exist for shaping the EM fields, but in either case there is not really a chamber that separates fuel from a 'combustion area'. Incidentally, while I use model rocket engines as the example since I think more people are familiar with them that basic design is also used in real life in the solid rocket boosters that we currently employ for the initial lifting of objects to space.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nostromo1a1 nostromo1a1's picture
pressure
to be more correct some a/c units operate at more than 500 psi and some even operate at negative atmospheric pressure or barely above absolute pressure which is very different. Depending where you were when you make a vertical jump physically you could jump into orbit. As for necessary pressure that is dependent on the temp or the gas you are compressing to liquid or otherwise manipulating and changing it's current state. before I forget it's not actually metallic it's more correctly called "Exotic Solid Phase"
base3numeral base3numeral's picture
EM as refrigerant
In my mind, the stabilizing field acts as a refrigerant, making the hydrogen act as if it were a few degrees above absolute zero. Refueling would then be as simple as magnetically (and, for good measure, physically) sealing the rocket, connecting a hose with an internal magnetic field suitable for keeping the hydrogen liquid that is linked to a storage area with another contained solid hydrogen stock. When refueling, the field around the stock relaxes, turning the hydrogen to a liquid, which either flows or is pumped through the hose, into the rocket (also set for liquid). When complete, the rocket fuel goes solid, and the hose field pumps back to the tank peristalsis style. Tank goes solid. Hose field SLOWLY goes to gas, keeping tabs on pressure. System disconnects. Enjoy your flight. @Lazarus
Quote:
body armor would shrug off massive rounds (although energy transfer to the guy inside might still be be a problem)
has me imagining someone in futuristic body armor getting hit by a high speed train, and that's cracking me up.
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Lazarus Lazarus's picture
nostromo1a1 wrote:to be more
nostromo1a1 wrote:
to be more correct some a/c units operate at more than 500 psi and some even operate at negative atmospheric pressure or barely above absolute pressure which is very different. Depending where you were when you make a vertical jump physically you could jump into orbit. As for necessary pressure that is dependent on the temp or the gas you are compressing to liquid or otherwise manipulating and changing it's current state. before I forget it's not actually metallic it's more correctly called "Exotic Solid Phase"
Metallic hydrogen is estimated to require in excess of around 14.5 million psi for formation, so that's about 5 orders of magnitude more than those 500 psi ac units. Also, it is absolutely impossible to jump into orbit with a vertical leap. If you leapt vertically gravity would either draw you back down and you would pass through your launching point and impact the surface or else you would exceed escape velocity for your locale and continue away from the body. In neither case would you orbit. You would have to have a horizontal component to the leap to orbit but even that would not truly work as with nothing to provide impulse once your feet leave the surface you are using for propulsion your energy you would have no way to increase your energy state meaning that the absolute best you could do in theory was to return to your launching point which would now be in your way (and that's ignoring the fact that miniscule drag forces will almost certainly degrade your orbit). And it is more correctly called 'metallic hydrogen' over 'exotic solid phase' in the same way that it would be more correct to refer to something as 'salmon' instead of 'fish'. Metallic hydrogen is an exotic solid phase but there are also other forms of exotic solid phase matter.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
base3numeral wrote:In my mind
base3numeral wrote:
In my mind, the stabilizing field acts as a refrigerant, making the hydrogen act as if it were a few degrees above absolute zero. Refueling would then be as simple as magnetically (and, for good measure, physically) sealing the rocket, connecting a hose with an internal magnetic field suitable for keeping the hydrogen liquid that is linked to a storage area with another contained solid hydrogen stock. When refueling, the field around the stock relaxes, turning the hydrogen to a liquid, which either flows or is pumped through the hose, into the rocket (also set for liquid). When complete, the rocket fuel goes solid, and the hose field pumps back to the tank peristalsis style. Tank goes solid. Hose field SLOWLY goes to gas, keeping tabs on pressure. System disconnects. Enjoy your flight. . .
It is only stated that the electromagnetic fields stabilize the metallic hydrogen. Formation of metallic hydrogen requires significantly more than just refrigeration. It requires massive pressure as well. Now it is possible that the pressure is also replaced by EM fields but if that is the case it seems like the implication is that the EM fields for a ship's tank only stabilize the metallic hydrogen. Perhaps it is inefficient to mount the much more powerful field generators that would be required for MH creation to a ship so they only mount ones strong enough to stabilize the MH. That being the case you would not be able to fill a ship's tanks with gaseous or liquid hydrogen and then convert it to metallic hydrogen. It would have to be metallic hydrogen as it is loaded which would prevent 'pumping' in any form.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
I would recommend looking at
I would recommend looking at the wikipedia page on solid-fuel rockets (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solid-fuel_rocket) to get an idea about how a metallic hydrogen engine probably works. It won't be 100% accurate since there's no oxidizer and the thrust is provided by relaxing the EM field instead of igniting the mixture but it should probably get people a long way to thinking about how the engine probably works. That said, I'm not so sure about my whole curved plates idea any more. It seems more likely that you would just have standard size 'motors' which are a combination of casing and grain. The engine proper would contain the EM generators that surround the casing, the seal and the nozzle. The 'motor' would be contained by device that is essentially the same as the engine's EM generator and 'refueling' would be a matter of removing the expended motor, mating the transport container to the engine, and sliding the new motor into place. Curved plates just seems a little too convoluted with too many potential points of failure.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nostromo1a1 nostromo1a1's picture
when in doubt and ...
when in doubt and have no actual knowledge ask a physics professor, molecular chemist, or a rocket scientist. I give up on these boards ...
base3numeral base3numeral's picture
Doh
Quote:
It is only stated that the electromagnetic fields stabilize the metallic hydrogen. Formation of metallic hydrogen requires significantly more than just refrigeration. It requires massive pressure as well. Now it is possible that the pressure is also replaced by EM fields but if that is the case it seems like the implication is that the EM fields for a ship's tank only stabilize the metallic hydrogen. Perhaps it is inefficient to mount the much more powerful field generators that would be required for MH creation to a ship so they only mount ones strong enough to stabilize the MH. That being the case you would not be able to fill a ship's tanks with gaseous or liquid hydrogen and then convert it to metallic hydrogen. It would have to be metallic hydrogen as it is loaded which would prevent 'pumping' in any form.
I looked at the phase diagram and went with solid phase instead of metal phase. I'm guessing the metal phase would be better for propulsion due to the pressure difference, which is considerable. Whatever the system is, there's also got to be one for morph scale, otherwise Rovers (space fighter variant) and Courier start to loose some luster. If it is cylinder sections, they'd be getting the middle bits. Edit: Courier, not Ring Flier
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Chernoborg Chernoborg's picture
Taking an idea from Project: Daedalus...
How about pellets? The solid metallic hydrogen could then be moved about through specialized piping and into fuel tanks. Pellet sizes could be adjusted to fit different scales of application. During operation pellets are moved (by gravity feed, magnetically, or maybe blown in like the ping pong balls from this episode of Mythbusters: https://youtu.be/4MOJN07XRYw ) into the chamber where they are destabilized for thrust. This also makes [em]making[/em] the metallic hydrogen more realistic since making small pellets would be easier than a massive slug. Prior to this my best idea for how it would was a tank with a kind of plunger that would hold the large slug to the plate where it was being sublimated for use.
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Lazarus Lazarus's picture
base3numeral wrote:I looked
base3numeral wrote:
I looked at the phase diagram and went with solid phase instead of metal phase. I'm guessing the metal phase would be better for propulsion due to the pressure difference, which is considerable.
Exactly. These engines are using metallic hydrogen, not just solid hydrogen. The greater pressure translates to a greater amount of stored energy which translates to a higher specific impulse, and by and large for the purposes of what we are dealing with specific impulse is your God. It is usually a far more critical figure than thrust to weight (and yes, there are exceptions such as combat applications and launch/landing, but overall you will get somewhere faster with a high Isp than with a low Isp, even if the low Isp has a much higher acceleration).
Quote:
Whatever the system is, there's also got to be one for morph scale, otherwise Rovers (space fighter variant) and Courier start to loose some luster. If it is cylinder sections, they'd be getting the middle bits. Edit: Courier, not Ring Flier
I'm not quite sure what you mean by 'middle bits'. Unfortunately we do run into a bit of a problem with metallic hydrogen engines and morphs, mainly the amount of fuel that they have to carry. Unfortunately we don't know the full Δv of that fuel because it isn't stated but we are told that they can accelerate at 'up to .25g' for an hour and a half. In the world of physics that is a little vague because a rocket will actually gain acceleration (not just velocity but its actual acceleration increases) as fuel is consumed and mass of the accelerating object is diminished. If we assume an Isp of 1600 and that the figures represent a total Δv of 13.23 km/sec (9.8m*.25*3600*1.5) then 57% of the morph's initial weight needs to be metallic hydrogen. That's an awful lot. If we assume that the total Δv is around 7.5 km/sec (which means we end with an acceleration of around .25 g) then we 'only' need about 38% of the morph to be metallic hydrogen, which is still an awful lot but less than before. In either case it doesn't really seem like you should have enough free space inside the morph for an internal engine of this size. It seems like the modification should be for an external engine or else an internal engine with far less Δv (meaning it runs for far less than an hour and a half). These large requirements become even sillier when you consider that metallic hydrogen engines for ships seem to have a thrust to weight ration somewhere in the neighborhood of 45:1. Using our first figures that means that 57% of the morph is the fuel but only .55% of the morph is the rest of the 'engine' (it gets a little complex because part of that figure should also be representing the stabilizing fields which are not technically considered part of the engine when calculating thrust to weight which is why I put that in quotes). If I'm devoting that much of my morph to fuel why am I devoting such a tiny, tiny amount to trust production? It seems to me like I would want to devote at least 3-6% of the morph to thrust production so that I have between 1.5-3 g's of acceleration, which would be very useful talking off from Mars (which has a surface gravity of .38 G) or Titan (which with a .14 G surface gravity can be overcome with the .25 G metallic hydrogen engine but which sacrifices nearly 60% of its thrust fighting gravity as opposed to 10% of its thrust if the engine produced 1.5 G's). As a result I sort of handwave the internal rocket for morphs in my game and say that aren't really metallic hydrogen engines like those used by spaceships. They are a modified metallic hydrogen engine which have to do something to excite the expanding hydrogen to produce an even greater Isp at the cost of a lower thrust to weight ratio. As a result the exact methods for refueling a ship's metallic hydrogen engine may not work on the internal engines of a morph. Of course this is just my own handwave/houserule. It occurs because I can get a little obsessed with the physics and the minutiae of how things would be working. Since the initial question was the kind of thing my quirk tries to answer I am providing all the details for how to generate a 'real world' answer. If you enjoy the level of 'realism' this kind of process brings, feel free to use my answer and ideas (or even expand off of them). If it is too cumbersome and it is going to get in the way of your enjoyment of the game, feel free to ignore them. The biggest issue is to just be sure you are creating a fun and compelling scene/scenario for you and your players.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
base3numeral base3numeral's picture
Middle Bits
By middle bits I mean the cylindrical sections from close to the center. If we go with curved plates of constant thickness, there's either going to be a cylinder (or slices of it) in the middle section. My mental image is similar to the following (though below is probably a large engine): http://www.tecplottalk.com/forums/addons/radialslice/radial_limitations.png The problem we run into is, if there is any fuel left, there are partially consumed plates. I'd imagine there are facilities at a refuel station to recycle the partially spent sections, or that they are placed towards the top to be consumed first. The details do get pretty interesting, as different morphs with the same engine would have different transit times, which is academic until you are trying to run someone down (which I feel is included in your statement about "combat applications"), and that's really where the focus will be. If it takes me a few extra hours to get from Titan to Iapetus isn't as big a deal as if I can get out of range of pursuit. I haven't run into the situation, but am holding out hope that the morph rockets could refuel ships, and vice versa. That would add some benefit to being aware of capabilities, and give folks extra motive to salvage derelict ships. Detail-wise, knowing how much solid H2 someone has on hand could be used to (carefully) re-pressurize an airlock, make water, or blow up a Regan cylinder (may take some help, I haven't run the numbers on that).
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Trappedinwikipedia Trappedinwikipedia's picture
Depending on how intensive
Depending on how intensive the field setup need to be, you might be able to use MH powder as the fuel. Simply dump it into an ignition chamber and let it become H2 gas again and you have a rocket. You'd have a lot of options for refueling in that case, with the added bonus that the same fuel powder can be used for many engines. I lean towards something like that because there's some evidence that metallic hydrogen could be metastable, so you wouldn't need EM fields to keep it metallic, you'd need to jolt it somehow to make it revert.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
Got it. Actually, the very
Got it. Actually, the very center of the column has to be hollow (at least I believe it does since that's the cross section of a standard solid rocket engine) so you would never have 'middle bits'. You would always start with the innermost layers and then as they are used up move outwards in consumption. Recovering unspent fuel is an issue which is why I initially came up with the idea of the curved plates. I assumed all the plates would get pulled. The outer plates which are still good could then just be put into new motors while inner plates that have been partially consumed could be 'reforged' into new plates. Now though I'm not quite as sure. It seems like the complications of attachments between the plates combined with potential problems such as grain fracture that might occur from reusing potentially damaged plates means it might just be simpler to remove all unspent fuel, combine it with new fuel and 'reforge' it into a new charge (I put reforge in quotes because while the hydrogen is in a metallic state I have no real idea what the structural properties are like and it could be far to brittle for anything that bears any resemblance to conventional forging. It is entirely possible that 'reforging' would mean allowing the hydrogen to sublimate and then returning it once more to its metallic state). As for the hope that a morph could be refueled from a ship's supplies you can always rule that it can be (at least until we get further clarification for how these engines work) but I would probably say in my campaign that the two forms are incompatible. Sort of like how both an automobile engine and a 747's engine are internal combustion engines that utilize petroleum based fuel but you can't use the gas from one in the other (the engine for a car is a reciprocating engine while the engine for the 747 is a gas turbine, but both of those are forms of internal combustion engines).
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
An important question here
An important question here (that I didn't see answered) was the question of how much of the ship mass is fuel. For a ship launching from the surface into orbit, IRL most of the ship is fuel (this is called the payload fraction). For example, the mass of the space shuttle is twenty times smaller than the mass of the fuel spent getting the shuttle into orbit. Hydrogen is fuel-efficient (high ISP) but low-thrust, so you need less (by mass) compared to rocket fuel. It's also usually very large, which is why metallic hydrogen is so nice, but compressing it like that will actually increase the mass, as you now need bigger equipment to store it. A GEV of course must be small, and isn't expected to get into orbit or do any fancy-pants maneuvers. Having played a ton of Kerbal Space Program, and looking at real-life examples, to support simple maneuvers like changing orbit from the Moon to the Earth, about 20-50% of the mass would be propellant. That's lower if the expected maneuvers are more like RCS, for docking between neighboring ships or brief maneuvers. The GEV is slightly smaller than a soviet BTR-80, so that gives us a ballpark of 15 tons, making its fuel weight /around/ 6 tons. I expect compressing hydrogen to the point of becoming metallic--a feat we haven't achieved yet IRL--probably takes some heavy duty equipment, as well as an easy source of hydrogen and lots of power. I don't think it makes sense to build that onto the GEV itself (it might make sense for larger craft). So either the metallic hydrogen is one or more large tanks with battery power that are manually put on the GEV, or the GEV docks into a larger machine and that machine "fills" it. Because of the complexity, danger, and business reasons, I would assume the latter is most common. So what is the time required to extract 6 tons of hydrogen from the atmosphere or water and compress it to 3,500,000psi? Well it would take about 60 tons of water. On earth, it would take more than 600,000 tons of atmosphere. We don't know how much electrical power it would take, but I imagine it would be "a lot". Requiring a GEV be docked and charged at least 24 hours doesn't seem unreasonable to me. Of course, if you don't need a full tank, it would be easier. And the less you need, the less pressure you need to reach, the less power and time it takes to process. (Note; fuel requirements are hard--they are limited by the mass of hydrogen and our ability to accelerate it. But lower vehicle mass and less maneuvering capability both reduce the fuel tank size. Keeping the same payload ratio, dropping the vehicle mass by half would drop the fuel requirements by more than half, without reducing its performance.)
DivineWrath DivineWrath's picture
One of the things that I read
One of the things that I read is that metallic hydrogen might not need high pressure to remain metallic. Diamonds need high pressure to create, but they remain diamonds once removed from that pressure. They're hoping that they can store metallic hydrogen at lower pressures. Unfortunately there is probably no way to test this hypothesis without actually making metallic hydrogen.
MrWigggles MrWigggles's picture
Semi related:
Semi related: Can you make a metallic version of any gas?
DivineWrath DivineWrath's picture
I don't know about other
I don't know about other gasses, but one of the reasons why scientists think hydrogen can go metallic is because it fits on the metal side of the periodic table. It just happens to be a gas instead of a solid. Hydrogen is a strange element. In theory, if it is pressurized to the point where it becomes a solid, it'll have material properties common to many metals.
MAD Crab MAD Crab's picture
Hydrogen doesn't fit well
Hydrogen doesn't fit well anywhere, even in the metal group. When you've only got one single electron to hide that naked proton, most of the rules go out the window. Metals are metals because they'd (mostly) rather give up some electrons to get stable orbitals than take them. This works okay because their nuclei are still screened by the rest of their electrons. All those electrons that the metals don't really want just hop around, atom to atom, free to flow with any electric field that's imposed on them. Non-metals want electrons quite a lot, so it's almost impossible to knock them free. You can make solid hydrogen with... moderately absurd pressures, and temperatures a few hairs above absolute zero (14K). It doesn't act like a metal at all, because the H-H bonds are the dominant force, and the electrons are still bound in their orbitals. To actually make a metallic solid you have to force all those nearly-bare protons into such close proximity that the electrons just can't decide what nucleus they're actually part of.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
nezumi.hebereke wrote:An
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
An important question here (that I didn't see answered) was the question of how much of the ship mass is fuel.
I very briefly mentioned how much metallic hydrogen it would take for an internal rocket earlier in this thread. The truth of the matter, though, is that the amount of the ship dedicated to fuel is really difficult to estimate because it depends an awful lot on the needs/design of the vehicle. Slow cargo vehicles with plasma engines will usually have a much lower fuel to payload ratio than a high speed fusion rocket for transporting people (despite the fact that a fusion rocket has a higher specific impulse). The length of the runs a ship makes also can have a significant impact on the amount of fuel the ship needs since there is little reason for a ship to be designed to have a lot more fuel than it needs for a standard trip. I created and shared a [url=https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/120V_4N_g_Q-25WXygsOHtV3PMYmkeA7R... doc spreadsheet[/url] a while back to make a lot of this easier.
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For a ship launching from the surface into orbit, IRL most of the ship is fuel (this is called the payload fraction). For example, the mass of the space shuttle is twenty times smaller than the mass of the fuel spent getting the shuttle into orbit.
That's true for today but a good part of that is because we actually live in a pretty lousy location for getting to orbit (relatively high gravity and relatively thick atmosphere compared to most EP habitations) while simultaneously using a fuel with a terribly low specific impulse. To reach low Earth orbit using an engine with a specific impulse of 450 (Hydrogen-Oxygen rocket) takes about 89% of the vehicle's mass. To reach circular orbit around the moon with an engine with a specific impulse of 1600 (metallic hydrogen) only requires about 11% of the vehicle's mass, and that's assuming a 'cold launch' (not a technical term. There probably is a technical term for a non-assisted launch but I don't know what it is). The vehicle needs a Δv of about 1.7 km/s. If Luna had a track about 6.5 km long that could accelerate a payload at 3 g's then the vehicle would require only an additional 800 m/s of Δv which would require 5% of its mass.
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Hydrogen is fuel-efficient (high ISP) but low-thrust, so you need less (by mass) compared to rocket fuel. It's also usually very large, which is why metallic hydrogen is so nice, but compressing it like that will actually increase the mass, as you now need bigger equipment to store it.
Hydrogen isn't much of anything. It all depends on how you handle it. Mixing it with oxygen and letting it explode (a hydrogen oxygen engine) produces low ISP but high thrust to weight. Metallic hydrogen being super compressed is lower thrust to weight (most likely because of the equipment necessary to maintain the stability of the metallic hydrogen) than hydrogen oxygen but is still relatively high and with a much better specific impulse than hydrogen oxygen. However, it pales in efficiency to a hydrogen fusion drive, although it has a much better thrust to weight.
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A GEV of course must be small, and isn't expected to get into orbit or do any fancy-pants maneuvers. Having played a ton of Kerbal Space Program, and looking at real-life examples, to support simple maneuvers like changing orbit from the Moon to the Earth, about 20-50% of the mass would be propellant. That's lower if the expected maneuvers are more like RCS, for docking between neighboring ships or brief maneuvers. The GEV is slightly smaller than a soviet BTR-80, so that gives us a ballpark of 15 tons, making its fuel weight /around/ 6 tons.
That's actually makes about 40% of the vehicle its fuel weight (assuming 15 tons is the combined weight of payload and fuel) for a Δv of 8.01 km/s. That's actually quite a lot. That would get you into Earth orbit if Earth didn't have an atmosphere (Δv to reach circular orbit around Earth ignoring atmosphere is about 7.9 km/s). 3 tons would be almost enough fuel to establish circular orbit around Mars and 1.5 tons would be enough to establish circular orbit around Luna. My guess is you are looking at around 1 ton of metallic hydrogen since I don't think a GEV's engine is even good enough to establish orbit around Luna but you might be looking at closer to 3 tons. I doubt you are looking at 6 tons based on the performance characteristics you were outlining. BTW, Kerbal is a good program but you might want to look at Orbiter.
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I expect compressing hydrogen to the point of becoming metallic--a feat we haven't achieved yet IRL--probably takes some heavy duty equipment, as well as an easy source of hydrogen and lots of power. I don't think it makes sense to build that onto the GEV itself (it might make sense for larger craft). So either the metallic hydrogen is one or more large tanks with battery power that are manually put on the GEV, or the GEV docks into a larger machine and that machine "fills" it. Because of the complexity, danger, and business reasons, I would assume the latter is most common. So what is the time required to extract 6 tons of hydrogen from the atmosphere or water and compress it to 3,500,000psi? Well it would take about 60 tons of water. On earth, it would take more than 600,000 tons of atmosphere. We don't know how much electrical power it would take, but I imagine it would be "a lot". Requiring a GEV be docked and charged at least 24 hours doesn't seem unreasonable to me. Of course, if you don't need a full tank, it would be easier. And the less you need, the less pressure you need to reach, the less power and time it takes to process.
You seem to be working on the idea of turning the hydrogen metallic inside the engine. I'm not saying you can't do it that way but it seems to me to add a lot of complication, sort of like refining petroleum and feeding the distillate straight into the gas tank of a car. Probably much better to have larger more efficient machines elsewhere that can run 24/7 creating the metallic hydrogen. Then to refuel the vehicle you simply have to transfer the metallic hydrogen in. (I say 'simply' but there are logistics that have to be dealt with in storing, transporting, and transferring the metallic hydrogen. I just think they are much easier to deal with than trying to compress it in situ)
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(Note; fuel requirements are hard--they are limited by the mass of hydrogen and our ability to accelerate it. But lower vehicle mass and less maneuvering capability both reduce the fuel tank size. Keeping the same payload ratio, dropping the vehicle mass by half would drop the fuel requirements by more than half, without reducing its performance.)
It is very unlikely you would reduce the fuel requirements by more than half without reducing performance. From an absolute physics standpoint a vehicle with half the mass requires exactly half the thrust and fuel (the Ideal Rocket Equation doesn't even concern itself with the absolute mass of the vehicle. It is always expressed as a percentage). There may be some issues with losses due to inefficiency but typically the smaller engine is actually less efficient (if it was less efficient to make the rocket motor larger then you would simply make two smaller ones which would result in exactly double the thrust).
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
Can you tell me where you
Can you tell me where you read this? Diamonds aren't a create example because carbon is a solid at standard temperature and pressure. Engines in EP don't maintain metallic hydrogen at high pressure, either, because they are electromagnetically stabilized so if it turns out that there's other ways that hydrogen can be kept in a metallic state without high pressure the actual impact is probably somewhat minimal. Without the requirement for EM generators you would probably get a better thrust to weight but since the thrust to weight for MH engines is already pretty good my guess is that they don't take up that much mass in the EP universe.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
MrWigggles wrote:Semi related
MrWigggles wrote:
Semi related: Can you make a metallic version of any gas?
Well, never say never but part of the reason that it's believed hydrogen has a metallic state is because of its configuration. Having 1 electron in its outer S shell makes it very similar to alakali metals which are fairly happy to shed that outer electron. Noble gasses on the other hand are very non-reactive because their outer electron shell is filled and so under terrestrial conditions don't exhibit any metallic properties. Of course if you were to crush them down hard enough that their electrons were to start wandering around because they couldn't tell which nucleus they belonged to then you might start viewing that as a metallic state, but the pressure involved would be far greater than that required to create metallic hydrogen. In fact the pressure is so far off the chart that it is possible that other aspects of physics would interfere. We don't really know because we haven't been able to view materials in those kinds of conditions. So for the short answer I would say 'I don't know. Probably, but I'm not sure and it probably isn't relevant to EP because they don't seem to be at that stage of development'.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
Lazarus wrote:. . .3 tons
Lazarus wrote:
. . .3 tons would be almost enough fuel to establish circular orbit around Mars and 1.5 tons would be enough to establish circular orbit around Luna. . .
So this thread has caused me to look around and find some new information. To take up an orbit 50 km above the surface of Luna a GEV would need 4.92 km/s of Δv which requires about 4 tons of metallic hydrogen remass and for Mars it would take about 17.9 km/s of Δv which requires about 10.5 tons of metallic hydrogen. An awful lot of that is caused by the fact that the GEV's rocket produces only .1 G of thrust. If it was capable of the 3 G of thrust that a standard ship has it would only require 2 tons and 4 tons of metallic hydrogen respectively. Because of that difference I have to kind of assume that the GEV probably uses a modified metallic hydrogen engine similar to the modified engine that I think morph's have to use. That explains the much lower thrust but probably results in a much higher specific impulse.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
MrWigggles wrote:Semi related
MrWigggles wrote:
Semi related: Can you make a metallic version of any gas?
My understanding is yes, but at really extreme pressures. That's what happens with a white dwarf. The extreme pressure causes all the elements to undergo electron degeneracy. Hydrogen, however, is much easier to do that with than say neon.
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Lazarus wrote:the amount of
Lazarus wrote:
the amount of the ship dedicated to fuel is really difficult to estimate because it depends an awful lot on the needs/design of the vehicle.
Agreed on that. I have to imagine on a GEV, the purpose would be to launch from an airless, low-gravity moon, or for minor maneuvers close to a mother ship. Having a full-blown rocket would seem to defeat the purpose of having a dedicated roving vehicle. Something smaller would make sense though--imagine of the lunar buggies had turbo boost.
To reach low Earth orbit using an engine with a specific impulse of 450 (Hydrogen-Oxygen rocket) takes about 89% of the vehicle's mass.[/quote] You focus a lot on ISP, but not on TWR. Remember, if your TWR is below 1, you could have an ISP of a million and it won't do you a lick of good. For a GEV's rocket to be useful on a planet or moon, it will need to have some oomph, and that limits the maximum feasible ISP. [quote wrote:
Hydrogen isn't much of anything.
ISP is limited by the mass of the remass. Hydrogen, being the lightest of the elements, is ideal for maximizing ISP. You can of course burn it in lower-ISP methods though. Atomic Rockets goes into way too much detail: http://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/engines.php (if you search for exhaust velocity or hydrogen)
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That's actually makes about 40% of the vehicle its fuel weight (assuming 15 tons is the combined weight of payload and fuel) for a Δv of 8.01 km/s. That's actually quite a lot. That would get you into Earth orbit if Earth didn't have an atmosphere (Δv to reach circular orbit around Earth ignoring atmosphere is about 7.9 km/s). 3 tons would be almost enough fuel to establish circular orbit around Mars and 1.5 tons would be enough to establish circular orbit around Luna. My guess is you are looking at around 1 ton of metallic hydrogen since I don't think a GEV's engine is even good enough to establish orbit around Luna but you might be looking at closer to 3 tons. I doubt you are looking at 6 tons based on the performance characteristics you were outlining.
As before, are you tempering your ISP values with the necessary thrust to overcome gravity?
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You seem to be working on the idea of turning the hydrogen metallic inside the engine. I'm not saying you can't do it that way but it seems to me to add a lot of complication, sort of like refining petroleum and feeding the distillate straight into the gas tank of a car.
Maybe I wasn't clear, but I agree with you; the conversion inside of the GEV would probably not be reasonable. I assume there would be a refinery or ISRU on-site the GEV would "plug into". By "in situ", I mean on the moon or whatever where the GEV is operating. Not loaded on the GEV itself.
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It is very unlikely you would reduce the fuel requirements by more than half without reducing performance.
By fuel requirements, I mean the mission requirements which would determine how much fuel you need; i.e., if you decide instead of your GEV needing to go 20 km/s it only needs to go 10 km/s, you can load less fuel on it.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
nezumi.hebereke wrote: . .
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
. . .You focus a lot on ISP, but not on TWR. Remember, if your TWR is below 1, you could have an ISP of a million and it won't do you a lick of good. For a GEV's rocket to be useful on a planet or moon, it will need to have some oomph, and that limits the maximum feasible ISP. . .
That's because in space ISP is King. It doesn't mean that acceleration isn't important. Acceleration is more like a Duke or Count; important in its own right, especially if the King isn't around (all the Δv in the world doesn't do you any good if you can't evade a missile), but usually not as important as the King. You are actually incorrect in the assumption that your Thrust to Weight has to exceed gravity. For one thing it completely ignores assisted launches. If an assisted launch provides enough Δv for an orbit with an altitude of 0 (termed Δ[sub]v0[/sub]) then even an extremely low thrust rocket could be used to stabilize and increase your orbit. An assist doesn't even need to provide enough Δv to actually do that assuming the engine has enough thrust to raise the Δv before the ship returns to the surface (highly likely when you are looking at thrusts of that are reasonable percentages of a body's gravity). It may not be enough for direct launch but it is enough to give you the Δv you need for orbit once you reach apogee in a lot of cases. Theoretically even really low thrust to weight ratios can overcome gravity by themselves. You simply accelerate perpendicular to the surface until you reach a high enough velocity to achieve Δ[sub]v0[/sub]. There is even a formula for how much extra energy this would take: Δ[sub]vd[/sub]=g[sub]p[/sub] * (Δ[sub]v0[/sub]/A) where g[sub]p[/sub] is the gravitational acceleration at the surface of the planet and A is the acceleration of the vehicle. Of course this is semi-theoretical since you would probably need a long enough surface to achieve this and you could not have much in the way of atmospheric drag. It also means that acceleration is not completely out of the picture as a vehicle with a lower acceleration takes longer to reach Δ[sub]v0[/sub] and so has a greater Δ[sub]vd[/sub] (High Δv is good, because it is like the budget a vehicle has to pay for its trip. High Δ[sub]vd[/sub] is bad because that's something that has to be paid for out of the Δv budget). All of that said, I am toying around in my head with houseruling that metallic hydrogen rockets, at least in the case of GEVs and morph internal rockets, work a little differently. Instead of being a straightforward solid rocket design, albeit with metallic hydrogen as remass, they are a hybrid design. Hydrogen gas feeds through an 'compression chamber' where it is stripped of its electrons, excited, and then channeled through an electromagnetic choke. This makes the engine a hybrid solid rocket/plasma drive. Higher ISP can be achieved by holding the hydrogen for longer periods of time and increasing the pressure of the choke but this results in reduced thrust to weight. Higher thrust to weight can be achieved by reducing time spent in the chamber and widening the choke, letting the full force of the suddenly expanding hydrogen through, but this reduces specific impulse. This would result in a more versatile engine that could allow a GEV to 'hop' even in full gravity and to provide its own assistance in launching from the surface of locales such as Luna while providing adequate Δv for space born operations without requiring overly large remass reserves. This came about because I was initially thinking there needed to be a sort of solid/plasma rocket hybrid to take the roll of the metallic hydrogen engines used in morphs since the remass requirement of a conventional MH rocket was over 50% of the morph but the acceleration of the internal rocket was so low. After coming up with the basic concept of the hybrid engine (I initially only thought of it as a fixed alteration to ISP and TWR) I realized it could probably be designed to be flexible.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
Lazarus wrote:You are
Lazarus wrote:
You are actually incorrect in the assumption that your Thrust to Weight has to exceed gravity. For one thing it completely ignores assisted launches.
That's true. For this example though, I assumed the GEV, which is noted as a ground vehicle, has at least enough thrust to reach escape velocity from a Luna-sized body, without the benefit of an outside assist.
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Hydrogen gas feeds through an 'compression chamber' where it is stripped of its electrons, excited, and then channeled through an electromagnetic choke.
Honestly, this is what I had assumed all along. It makes a lot more sense than any sort of conventional 'burning rocket' sort of design. Could be I just forgot what the book actually says :P Ultimately, metallic hydrogen is a propellant, so it could be used in just about any sort of engine you might imagine. (I actually sort of blacked out on that one too--metallic hydrogen and anti-matter aren't mutually exclusive in my mind, since one is a propellant, one is a fuel source, and neither are an engine type).
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
nezumi.hebereke wrote:. .
nezumi.hebereke wrote:
. . .That's true. For this example though, I assumed the GEV, which is noted as a ground vehicle, has at least enough thrust to reach escape velocity from a Luna-sized body, without the benefit of an outside assist. . .
Well, at a pure .1 G of acceleration the GEV lacks the capacity for lifting off of Luna without some sort of assistance (even if that assistance is in the form of a really long 'runway' or a ramp). Luna's just got too much gravity. Of course the modified MH engine might be able to handle it, so just say they have one of those. I'll try and work up some reasonable fuel estimates based on certain assumptions about the Δv and ISP curves and how they interact with one another.
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Honestly, this is what I had assumed all along. It makes a lot more sense than any sort of conventional 'burning rocket' sort of design. Could be I just forgot what the book actually says :P Ultimately, metallic hydrogen is a propellant, so it could be used in just about any sort of engine you might imagine. (I actually sort of blacked out on that one too--metallic hydrogen and anti-matter aren't mutually exclusive in my mind, since one is a propellant, one is a fuel source, and neither are an engine type).
Yeah. The book is a bit light on details beyond the fact that the propellant is electromagnetically stabilized. However, metallic hydrogen rockets are an existing theoretical design so by default we should probably assume they use the existing design with the small changes they have notated. My change is a lot more extreme and probably a lot less plausible in the terms of actual physics, but since something is needed to stopgap a few issues (such as the amount of remass needed for a morph) I am comfortable enough using them in my own campaign.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nezumi.hebereke nezumi.hebereke's picture
A cursory google search shows
A cursory google search shows the real life metallic hydrogen rocket design is basically a bottle filled with metallic hydrogen which they just let decompress out. Ostensibly terrible, unless the alternative is an RP-1 rocket. Are you referencing a different design I don't know about?
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
Not particularly. I forgot
Not particularly. I forgot that even for a plain metallic hydrogen engine I assume some differences off the standard theoretical design. The standard theoretical design has to be a 'bottle with metallic hydrogen' because it assumes that the hydrogen only stays in its metallic state due to pressure. Because in EP it is stated that EM fields maintain the state of the metallic hydrogen you don't really need a design where the end can be closed to maintain pressure. Instead pressure is regulated through relaxing the fields. That would make the non-hybrid metallic engine design much more like a conventional solid rocket in design, the difference being that unlike a conventional SRE you are able to turn on and off the engine and vary the output (much like an electrical solid propellant engine but operating in reverse where decreasing the current increases engine output). Such an engine would probably use a bore like other SRE's since it is possible to regulate the remass that is converting to gas (allowing the bore to be used as a pressure chamber in high thrust situations) as opposed to the normal theoretical design where conversion of the remass is only controlled through the pressure of the entire system.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nostromo1a1 nostromo1a1's picture
real world
hey MAD Crab, I think it would appear that the real world is forgotten or overlooked here for it's inconvenience, good try though, and good luck getting it across. Metallic Hydrogen is not solid, it's still a liquid state more or less. There is the subject discussed years ago of Metastable Hydrogen now days thrown in the same basket. The idea of Metastable Hydrogen was to compress it to a solid then use it like a solid rocket motor or use lasers to strip it inside the motor housing.
Trappedinwikipedia Trappedinwikipedia's picture
Metallic hydrogen doesn't
Metallic hydrogen doesn't actually have a set phase. It's theorized that within a specific pressure range liquid metallic hydrogen could exist at fairly low temperatures. I can't get past the paywall to see exactly what those temperatures are, but given the generally extreme nature of metallic hydrogen physics I wouldn't be very surprised if it was still a whole lot hotter than room temperature though. Like any other metal, hydrogen would have a melting and boiling point, varied by temperature. Liquid metallic hydrogen is thought to exist in the core of Jupiter because of its high temperature for example. As I don't know the sweet spots for metallic hydrogen, I don't know if it would be feasible to store it as liquid, or if that's a prohibitively high temperature.
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
nostromo1a1 wrote:hey MAD
nostromo1a1 wrote:
hey MAD Crab, I think it would appear that the real world is forgotten or overlooked here for it's inconvenience, good try though, and good luck getting it across. Metallic Hydrogen is not solid, it's still a liquid state more or less. .
Nothing is being forgotten or overlooked (except perhaps manners). Metallic hydrogen may be liquid depending upon temperature and pressure. However, most phase state diagrams that I have been able to locate indicate that the absolute lowest temperature is still above room temperature (I believe the absolute best I found was about 320K or about 110 F. What is more, those graphs are extremely theoretical. We are still not really sure what they are like because we aren't producing metallic hydrogen in any real quantities that lets us be sure what those graphs will ultimately look like. So why do I (and others) work on the idea that the hydrogen is solid when there is a possibility that it is liquid? Because the game designers already stated that the fuel used in the engine is solid. It is right there in the book where it says 'Metallic Hydrogen Rocket (MH): Metallic hydrogen is a solid form of hydrogen created using exceedingly high pressures.' Maybe it turns out that the graphs are wrong and the minimum temperature is higher. Maybe it is because the metallic hydrogen is under higher pressure than that particular point and as a result the transition point requires a higher temperature. Maybe the electromagnetic stabilization does something that causes the metallic hydrogen to be solid at a higher temperature for the same reason it is remaining metallic at lower pressures. Whatever the reason, the game is making an assumption and we are trying to remain within that assumption. This isn't 'forgetting or overlooking the real world' because in the real world we don't have metallic hydrogen lying about, so unless you can produce some please stop saying 'this is how it is'. Yes, you may have some diagrams showing a lower temperature for transition between solid and liquid metallic hydrogen but at present those are at odds with graphs from other perfectly reputable (please note, I am not saying 'more reputable'. Your scientists may be perfectly reputable, but so are a lot of others who don't agree with you) scientists. And please realize, I'm not saying you can't suggest that perhaps people houserule something. I myself have talked several times about houseruling aspects of metallic hydrogen engines to make them work better and to explain certain inconsistencies that occur when they are used by morphs. However, when I do that you may notice I am very clear that what I'm proposing is a houserule. I don't say 'you can't just say that morphs use standard metallic hydrogen rockets because of these problems'. I say 'I see these problems and this houserule is a solution'. If you want to suggest a houserule that ships use liquid metallic hydrogen instead of solid then go right ahead. Just don't try and act like we have to do it that way.
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
ThatWhichNeverWas ThatWhichNeverWas's picture
Technically, Brie is a solid...
In my headcannon, MH is stored/pumped as a superfine powder, magnetically suspended in the tank. Fuel is moved to the Nozzle by altering the configuration of the field. Showing my ignorance here , but why is a "hybrid" MH engine necessary? Because it's a pure propellant, a given amount of MH will provide a set ISP, with thrust scaling to the size of the nozzle, or rather how much propellant can be expelled at once. I'm also not entirely sure why the mass requirements are problematic for morphs, or at least those designed to incorporate them from the get go.
In the past we've had to compensate for weaknesses, finding quick solutions that only benefit a few. But what if we never need to feel weak or morally conflicted again?
Lazarus Lazarus's picture
ThatWhichNeverWas wrote:In my
ThatWhichNeverWas wrote:
In my headcannon, MH is stored/pumped as a superfine powder, magnetically suspended in the tank. Fuel is moved to the Nozzle by altering the configuration of the field. Showing my ignorance here , but why is a "hybrid" MH engine necessary? Because it's a pure propellant, a given amount of MH will provide a set ISP, with thrust scaling to the size of the nozzle, or rather how much propellant can be expelled at once. I'm also not entirely sure why the mass requirements are problematic for morphs, or at least those designed to incorporate them from the get go.
The hybrid engine is necessary exactly because of the mass requirements. Metallic hydrogen has a theoretical specific impulse of around 1600. Without some sort of extra energy entering the equation (such as the conversion to a plasma state and the use of an electromagnetic choke) the ISP remains unchanged no matter what you do. This means that to get the performance stated for internal rocket engines the over half the morph's weight would need to be reaction mass. Now you are correct that someone could build a dedicated space travel morph that has large amounts of remass like that but if that was the case why does it have such tiny nozzles? It actually has to use significantly more remass when trying to launch from surfaces such as the Luna because of the low acceleration. Using Luna as an example a morph would require about 18% of its mass to launch from the surface to a 50 km orbit around Luna with .25 G of acceleration. It would only require about 13% with 3 G of acceleration. Using some back of the envelope guesstimate calculations the difference in nozzles between .25 G and 3 G is less than 5%, so there is no real reason for a morph designed for space travel to have the lower acceleration of the internal rocket motor unless it has a lower thrust to weight ratio than a standard metallic hydrogen engine (and the primary reason for that would be because of some attempt to increase your ISP). Additionally, while that much reaction mass is tenable for a dedicated morph the robotic implant can be put into any synth morph. Assuming nothing else changed on that morph the new morph would need to be around 2.3 times more massive than the original morph to accommodate that much remass and it seems like that should be mentioned in the description (of course in fairness it should also be mentioned that it isn't a pure metallic hydrogen engine if it is a hybrid like my assumption).
My artificially intelligent spaceship is psychic. Your argument it invalid.
nostromo1a1 nostromo1a1's picture
Question for Lazarus
I am curious as to what is your technical background Lazarus? Not trying to be offensive here, just curious. College learned or self learned are both fine. Sometimes those who are self educated are in the know better than the learned with their degrees. Einstein, Lincoln, etc.
ThatWhichNeverWas ThatWhichNeverWas's picture
"Wendy I can Fly!" *Wooosh* "MY FLESH!"
Lazarus wrote:
The hybrid engine is necessary exactly because of the mass requirements. … This means that to get the performance stated for internal rocket engines the over half the morph's weight would need to be reaction mass. Now you are correct that someone could build a dedicated space travel morph that has large amounts of remass like that but if that was the case why does it have such tiny nozzles? It actually has to use significantly more remass when trying to launch from surfaces such as the Luna because of the low acceleration. … Using some back of the envelope guesstimate calculations the difference in nozzles between .25 G and 3 G is less than 5%, so there is no real reason for a morph designed for space travel to have the lower acceleration of the internal rocket motor unless it has a lower thrust to weight ratio than a standard metallic hydrogen engine (and the primary reason for that would be because of some attempt to increase your ISP).
I can think of two reasons why a smaller nozzle could make sense: The engine as written isn't intended for orbital insertion, but rather travel in microgravity, and a larger nozzle means more exhaust, increasing the risk of damage to the morph. The latter combines neatly with the admitadly odd limit on acceleration – the limit is [i]programmed[/i] safety feature, not a physical element of the engine. Extending from this, I think it's perfectly reasonable for us to simply say that it's a pure MH engine (preserving the ISP), with a nozzle capable of up to 3g accelerations but [i]unlocking[/i] it requires a Piloting or Freefall check.
Lazarus wrote:
Additionally, while that much reaction mass is tenable for a dedicated morph the robotic implant can be put into any synth morph. Assuming nothing else changed on that morph the new morph would need to be around 2.3 times more massive than the original morph to accommodate that much remass and it seems like that should be mentioned in the description (of course in fairness it should also be mentioned that it isn't a pure metallic hydrogen engine if it is a hybrid like my assumption).
I suppose the question here is how much the augment alters the morph's basic structure, since Morph mass is never mentioned in any case.
In the past we've had to compensate for weaknesses, finding quick solutions that only benefit a few. But what if we never need to feel weak or morally conflicted again?
base3numeral base3numeral's picture
Not super relevant
But apparently humans have created metallic hydrogen, though it's not certain if it is solid or liquid, and it's possible that once it becomes a metal, it can stay in that state in temperatures and pressures during which it was not a metal. https://arstechnica.com/science/2017/01/80-years-late-scientists-finally...
Strength in depth... The Fleet
ORCACommander ORCACommander's picture
haha I was just about to post
haha I was just about to post about this

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