1. Who decided that if you don't reach the moon with a direct insertion trajectory, then the "flight" does not qualify? This sounds to me more like a remark for the sake of the argument, not really a constructive approach to the subject. Who claimed that the Shuttle can reach the moon via direct insertion? AFAIR, not me.
Sorry, I was not speaking about direct insertion.
I did not disqualify any approach.
I used the Apollo approach because that is what I "know", at least is something which I can handle in my small brain.
In your first question you seem to prefer a direct insertion.
In your second question you seem not to prefer a direct insertion.
I am no rocket scientist, I can't say if a direct insertion is better then a parking orbit. But this is an interesting approach I did not thought of.
2. Who claimed that the mission has any other purpose but reaching the moon and returning safely? Not me! I didn't say "to land" or "to photograph" or "launch a scientific payload"? Not me!
Do you feel beeing attacked? This is not my intention.
I don't know what is in that paper because I don't have it, but I already wrote, that probably only reaching and returning would be possible:
Should this weight be negative we could avoid lunar orbit and do an Apollo 13 style flight. This should need less fuel.
3. Next you will claim that the Shuttle cannot land and take off the moon. In order to prevent that from hapening, I am reminding everybody that the scope of the discussion is Shuttle REACHING the moon and returning safely . No mention of landing, no mention of direct insertion, no mention of useful payload apart from a crew of two.
Hey, I didn't mention landing with a single word. We all know, that the or-biter can not land on the moon.
Instead of splitting hair about semantics, and juggling with convoluted logic.
Didn't you see the smiley's after my remarks of theoretical and practical.
I invite both of you to firing your Mathlabs and starting playing with the numbers. At least you know that a solution exists, so it's not a waste of time.
Saying "it's impossible" or "I don't think it's possible", or "doesn't qualify because it's not a direct insertion flight" doesn't count as a scientific argument or adult attitude.
Come on, why do you heat up the discussion telling us not having adult attitude?
Every scientific question starts with an hypothesis which you discuss with an experiment, a study or some calculations.
My hypothesis is: "To reach the moon and return safely it would need more fuel than you can lift with a shuttle in the payload bay."
My "calculations" I already posted, I am just missing some information (e.g. speeds and OMS performance).
Speaking of OMS performance, I am sure they are better than the SSME because they are designed for space and the SSME are designed for the upper atmosphere.
(Is that correct?)
Anyhow, I would use the engine which gives me more delta-V out of a kilogram of fuel.
I have the luxury of not needing to play with the numbers because I have the paper which already gives me the proof.
OK, I don't want to stir an argument as well, so I deleted my comment here
If you are inquisitive, curious or plain argumentative, go ahead - convince yourselves, not me.
Have fun with the numbers.
If someone can point me to the numbers I asked for I probably start my "Mathlab", but to be honest, the whole thing is l'art pour l'art.
One direct question, Admin. You mentioned Vinny's experiment with SSM. Do you think it is the right model to experiment with? Are the orbital mechanics outside the Hubble orbit simulated realistically?
I don't want to offend you or SSM here. I know that SSM's purpose is to show as realistically as possible with a 50$ simulator the missions of the Space Shuttle.
The question is, how far does it make sense to experiment with SSM or should we better stay in the mathlab here for this question?
/Armin
PS:
Is the mentioned paper public? Can you give us a link?Is it possible that we can read the mentioned paper as well?
I seems to be a really interesting paper and when it can save me from calculating I would prefer reading.