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Copernicus Loading

Bryce Science Fiction posted on Mar 27, 2011
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Description


Elon Musk, CEO of SpaceX, has said that rocket engineering is mostly a lot of plumbing. In the details (many not visible, I'm afraid) of this newest spaceship model, I've done a lot of work to make sure the plumbing for the fuel and radiator systems actually connect. This view at least shows a some of that detail. It was a big complicated model. I had fun with it. Thanks as always for all of your comments and favorites. --- CCS Copernicus was the Colonial Bureau's solution to transporting a large number of colonists to Mars at every favorable launch window. The ship's VASMIR engines could only push the vessel at a hundredth of a gravity, but that was still enough thrust to make a sixty day crossing possible. With a sixty-sixty-sixty day flight plan, the colonial transport could make the crossing, fully loaded at 45,000 tonnes, unload passengers and cargo at Phobos over a two month period, and then return to Earth for maintenance and refueling. At the time, Copernicus was the largest interplanetary vessel ever built. Each of the one hundred meter rings was designed to house a thousand colonists in Spartan comfort. Crossing every twenty-six months throughout the 60s, the Copernicus and its growing fleet of companions transported thirty thousand colonists to Mars during the 2060s. They accounted for two thirds of the settlers to arrive in that decade. The 2061 crossing was a discontinuity in the colonization of the red planet. The two thousand settlers on Copernicus nearly doubled the population of Mars, leading to a widely resented emergency effort to house and transfer the newcomers to the surface. For Martians, whether you or your ancestors were "pre-Cop" became the equivalent of Americans tracing their roots to the Pilgrims. When Copernicus and sister ship Ptolemy arrived with four thousand more settlers in 2063, the "pre-Cop" and "First-Cop" alike nearly rioted, but after that passage, the "Phobos Express" became adept at handling the influx of colonists. The five Copernicus-class ships proved to be short-lived, at least as built. Their relatively low velocity VASMIR plasma engines were nearly obsolete even in 2060, and their reliance on argon propellant required refueling from Earth, not lower cost lunar or asteroid sources. It took nearly three dozen Orca shuttle runs to refuel, refurbish and reload Copernicus between runs and the twenty month loiter time in Earth orbit made it uneconomical as the Colonial Bureau sought to lower costs by privatizing operations. And the Deuterium-Tritium reactors were maintenance nightmares; their containment shields were gradually worn away by neutron radiation, and their Tritium fuel required replenishment every five years. In the 80s, the Kepler and Newton were rebuilt with CNO-Hydrogen fusion power plants and multi-segment water-propelled microwave engines and they continued service to the end of the century. The other three ships were dismantled in Earth orbit, their habitat rings and superstructures forming the backbone of the Komarov receiving station. Great Big Book of Spaceships (Eight Edition), Public Information ePress, 2180

Comments (11)


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grafikeer

9:51PM | Sun, 27 March 2011

Really amazing modelling,right down to the smallest details...the cranes are a nice touch,although I would have thought it safer if the cargo ships were actually docked somehow...exceptional work and back story!

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NefariousDrO

10:29PM | Sun, 27 March 2011

That is bloody brilliant modeling! When I look at the full-size image I find I could probably inspect it for an hour and still find details I'd not noticed before. I love the story as well, you really know your stuff when it comes to the science behind the fiction! Great stuff all around, and always a real joy to see what you've done next!

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alessimarco

10:39PM | Sun, 27 March 2011

~Fantastic work!!~

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peedy

11:58PM | Sun, 27 March 2011

Fantastic modeling! Great lighting. Corrie

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preeder

3:00AM | Mon, 28 March 2011

Excellent.

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SIGMAWORLD

9:49AM | Mon, 28 March 2011

Excellent sf!

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wblack

1:21PM | Mon, 28 March 2011

Top notch modeling and science, a finely crafted back story that matches the effort and workmanship of your modeling, very well done!

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Bambam131

7:49AM | Tue, 29 March 2011

It looks like you have done your homework and the presentation is excellent. I am looking forward to seeing more detailed pictures of this ship with all the different parts in greater detail. I hope to have some new work soon as I am still trying to recover 8 months worth of work from a crashed drive that has been using Spin-rite to recovery my data for the last 22 days. I still have over 2 weeks left in recovering all the data, but I am at 82% recovered. This will be the last time that I will take a chance like this. I am now using an online service to backup all my data. David

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kjer_99

12:04AM | Wed, 30 March 2011

Have to agree with everybody above. A great model and very unusual looking as well.

dcmstarships

10:24AM | Fri, 08 April 2011

well thought-out and quite plausible as your designs always are

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Mutos2

11:06PM | Sun, 15 April 2012

A very plausible and well-told story to back an already brilliant pic and ultra-detailed modelling !


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