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OK, it's cold outside in Earth's northern hemisphere and here's something
topical. http://www.webolutionary.com/3d/imag...med_mars-1.jpg What do you think the soaring possibilities would be on a terraformed Mars with an atmosphere as dense as Earth's? For one thing, your compass wouldn't work - there's no magnetic field. The Sun's heating would be much less but the gravity is only one third that of Earth. Maybe a hang glider that folds into a backpack? Speculation, Mr. Spock? Bill Daniels |
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Assuming that to qualify as terraformed the Martian
atmosphere would have to be similar to that of the Earth then if the Martian gravity is one third of Earth's you would be unlikely to have an atmosphere of the same density as Earth's. I asked a similar question a couple of years ago but it was in the summer - so here goes again. What configuration of human survivable planet would give the best (i.e. fastest) soaring conditions. Planet size and mass, gravity, atmospheric density, heating from the (?) Sun, proportion of land mass to ocean, precipitation and cloud amounts etc. would all be interrelated. Glider configurations would also differ - I guess we could have bigger spans in low gravity and atmospheric density planets like terraformed Mars. Only known or realistic materials for glider design to be considered. My guess is that the Earth would come out as pretty close to the optimum planet for Soaring and probably merits saving (although I realise this isn't thought necessary by GWB et al) for future generations. On the other hand if it turns out that the Earth is pretty useless as a soaring planet we wouldn't need to bother so much. John Galloway MAt 18:06 25 January 2004, Bill Daniels wrote: OK, it's cold outside in Earth's northern hemisphere and here's something topical. http://www.webolutionary.com/3d/imag...med_mars-1.jpg What do you think the soaring possibilities would be on a terraformed Mars with an atmosphere as dense as Earth's? For one thing, your compass wouldn't work - there's no magnetic field. The Sun's heating would be much less but the gravity is only one third that of Earth. Maybe a hang glider that folds into a backpack? Speculation, Mr. Spock? Bill Daniels |
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![]() "John Galloway" wrote in message ... Assuming that to qualify as terraformed the Martian atmosphere would have to be similar to that of the Earth then if the Martian gravity is one third of Earth's you would be unlikely to have an atmosphere of the same density as Earth's. Venus, with about the same gravity as Earth, has an atmosphere 90 times as deep and dense (With a surface pressure equal to the water pressure one Kilometer below the Earth's ocean). Mars, even though much smaller, might be able to hold an atmosphere with a surface pressure of 1000 mb - at least for a reasonable time. Assuming the technology to terraform Mars in the first place, the atmosphere could be maintained at that surface pressure. This implies that the atmosphere would be much deeper with a surface boundary layer measured in 10's of Kilometers. (Think really tall thermals.) Thinking about a theoretical terraformed Mars make you realize just how much everything we know about terrestrial aerodynamics and weather depends on the ICAO standard atmosphere. I guess the first step is to figure out what the terraformed Mars equivalent of that would be. It's interesting to think of a 15 meter glider in 1/3 gravity. At 1000 mb the Reynolds numbers would be the same but the flying weight would be reduced by 2/3rds. You might want to carry a LOT of ballast. The Mars year is 687 Earth days so it would be a really long soaring season. Bill Daniels |
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On Sun, 25 Jan 2004 15:21:44 -0700, "Bill Daniels"
wrote: Thinking about a theoretical terraformed Mars make you realize just how much everything we know about terrestrial aerodynamics and weather depends on the ICAO standard atmosphere. I guess the first step is to figure out what the terraformed Mars equivalent of that would be. It's interesting to think of a 15 meter glider in 1/3 gravity. At 1000 mb the Reynolds numbers would be the same but the flying weight would be reduced by 2/3rds. You might want to carry a LOT of ballast. I suspect you'd need to bring the wing loading up to something like current practise in order to get into the same Re number regime we're used to. You could either add lots of ballast (200 kg or so) or reduce the wing area. If you did the latter at current weights you'd end up with 3 - 3.5 sq. m of wing. Consider also that the chord should not be reduced by much, because that reduces Re, so you'd end up with a 5 - 6m wing. The roll rate should be spectacular! The Mars year is 687 Earth days so it would be a really long soaring season. The sun is weaker (about 52% of Earthly incident solar radiation) due to Mars' 37% greater distance from the sun, so the thermals would be quite a lot weaker, possibly starting later and stopping earlier in the day. Does anybody on this 'ere ng know anything about when dust devils are active during the Martian day? And, sadly, the non-soaring season would also be rather long. OTOH it wouldn't be so nearly far to tow our trailers to go to the Martian Antipodes for winter. -- martin@ : Martin Gregorie gregorie : Harlow, UK demon : co : Zappa fan & glider pilot uk : |
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At an astronomy meeting this evening, I obtained a
bit of met data about Mars. Not sure as to how accurate this all is. The day (sol) is 24.5 hours long. The atmospheric pressure is about 6 millibar on the plains, increasing to a maximum of 10 millibars in some of the basins such as the Hellas Basin. The pressure falls off rapidly and is probably negligible in the highlands and at the top of Olympus Mons. On the equator the temperature varies between around +10 centigrade at midday down to maybe -40 centigrade at night. However this is the surface temperature. At 2 feet the temperature falls to 0 centigrade, and at 4-5 feet the temperature is down to -20 centigrade. Winds have been measured at around 50-60 mph. There are large scale atmospheric events such as duststorms which can be global in extent. There are also thought to be 'dust devils' which are similar in profile to tornados but which extend up to 30,000ft. There are clouds which may be water at 15 miles and carbon dioxide at upto 25 miles. Mars is about 1/10 the mass of the earth. There are some ridge features available. Many craters have ridges about 300ft high at the top. There are also dunes and step effects with heights of 6-30 feet. There is a very large valley, Mariner valley which is much bigger than the rift valley. Around the base of Mons Olympus there is a ridge which is four miles high. There can be carbon dioxide fogs in the Hellas basin. Wilst the earth year is 365 days, the earth is 93 million miles from the sun and this distance only varies by about 4 million miles. However on Mars the distance to the sun is around 120 million miles at the closest but over 150 million miles at the furthest. So the possible gliding conditions appear to be: Ridge running on Olympus Mons - 4 mile high ridge, pressure 2-4 millibar, temp around -20 to -60 centigrade, wind 20-100 knots. IMC climbs in small very tight dust devils - practice in tornados first. Probably significant G-force/stress issues! Thermal flying - pressure 2-8 millibar, temp around -60 to +10 centigrade, height range 3-30 ft, flight time 6-10 hours. This would probably be quite difficult to achieve as long wingspans would not be compatible with steep banking at a few feet. Straight downhill glides at very shallow angles (LD may need to be several 100 or 1000) from the top of the Hellas basin, or across/along the Mariner 'rift' valley. Thus I think the glider would need to fly in very low atmospheric pressure of 0.1 to 10 millibars, in a temperature range of -80 to +20 centigrade. It would need to be strong enough not to break up in the local dust devils. Have an excellent LD and possibly very small wingspan. I suspect that we will need to sort out our local stratospheric soaring before we can build a glider to fly successfully in these conditions. Rory O'Conor |
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