Reactor power increased to 15 MW;
Crew cut down to 4
640У445
(61 488 bytes) |
Switch to a stationary "headlight"-shaped
lander with frontal heat shield
640У441
(89 836 bytes) |
In 1969, one more Martian mission project was considered.
The Martian vehicle was to be assembled in low Earth orbit
using a modified N1 launch vehicle (N1M). The Mars expedition
system included an interplanetary orbital vehicle housing
the crew and key on-board systems; a martian lander; an
Earth return vehicle (to be used by the crew for descent
to Earth), propulsion power plant (nuclear reactor) with
electrical propulsion engines. The
Martian vehicle structure was to be shaped as a long needle,
which carried a reactor placed in a remote position for
the purposes of radiation safety, and a conical heat rejection
radiator. In contrast to the 1960 project, only one conic
segment-shaped spacecraft with deployable frontal heat shield
was to land on the Martian surface. The vehicle also used
electrical propulsion, and the nuclear reactor power was
raised to 15 MW. The total number of the crew was cut down
to 4.
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