Ian S C wrote:Solar power, you work it out: Earth about 93,000,000 ml from the sun, Mars 141,500,000 ml from the sun, at that distance you need a solar reflector about the size of a football field to get enough power to send a radio message back to Earth, just to ask for a better power supply, let alone boil the water for the coffee.
Umm, the bold part above is demonstratively wrong.
Spirit and Opportunity, Mars surface probes, relied
exclusively on solar cells for their electrical power and worked very well. Both do have a small nuke pile as an alternative heat source. They were only supposed to run for 90 days, and Opportunity is still working. While they relayed their data to both directly to earth, and to a satellite in Mars orbit, their antenna arrays are not as big as football fields, nor were the approximate 140 watt solar arrays as big as football fields. Do I need to post pictures and videos sent back (radioed) from these probes?
Curiosity, the most recent of our Mars probes, does use a nuke power source, but that's one large craft with a mass of on-board experiments all demanding power. The mobility of such a heavy craft also makes a solar array unworkable.
I'm talking about the moon where there are no dust storms, or clouds, as we see on Mars to cloud the solar cells, and that was the sole focus of my post. A solar array on the moon would be far more efficient than an earth based array simply because there would never be any cloud cover and these cells work better the colder they get. NASA employs vary large solar arrays on the ISS for a reason.
Ian S C wrote:Nasa is looking at Plutonium238, and Uranium dioxide, The Pu 238 one would produce 500W and use about 1Kg of fuel every 15 years. I think they would like 40KW for a base station power supply.
Already been done, for a long time now. See Voyager probes. See Opportunity.
Ian S C wrote:As the motor would be a pressurised one, it would be hermetically sealed, so the talk of a Stirling Engine not working in space is irrelevent.
Still a mechanical device, and eventually will fail. Repair/rebuild on the moon would be far more problematic than erecting a solar array. No moving parts in a silicone solar cell. I don't think it is currently possible to build a machine, with moving parts, that will last for 50 years of continuous service.
Ian S C wrote:Whether the engine is a free piston type (see Sunpower), or a thermomechanical generator, it matters little, as long as the most efficient is chosen. I don't think that for power generation you will see a crankshaft in space, although a rotative engine may be of use for some opperations, maybe a fan to blow some warmth around the living quarters. Ian S C
NASA is looking into Stirling technology for some deep space probes, powered by nukes, but I think you'll find that for almost anything inside the orbit of Mars the first choice for direct power will be a solar array. This is a mature technology that has a proven track record. With improvements in battery technology a large solar array on the moon seems like the best choice for a long term installation.
R