Project Lyra: Catching 1I/'Oumuamua Using Nuclear Thermal Rockets
Adam Hibberd, Andreas M. Hein

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of Nuclear Thermal Propulsion for interstellar object interception, demonstrating it could significantly reduce mission duration and increase payload capacity compared to chemical or laser sail propulsion.
Contribution
It presents a detailed analysis of various NTP systems and trajectories, showing NTP's potential for faster, more efficient interstellar object missions.
Findings
NTP offers at least twice the specific impulse of chemical rockets.
A mission to 1I/'Oumuamua could be completed in 14 years using NTP.
Payloads of around 2.5 metric tonnes are feasible with NTP.
Abstract
The first definite interstellar object observed in our solar system was discovered in October of 2017 and was subsequently designated 1I/'Oumuamua. In addition to its extrasolar origin, observations and analysis of this object indicate some unusual features which can only be explained by in-situ exploration. For this purpose, various spacecraft intercept missions have been proposed. Their propulsion schemes have been chemical, exploiting a Jupiter and Solar Oberth Maneuver (mission duration of 22 years) and also using Earth-based lasers to propel laser sails (1-2 years), both with launch dates in 2030. For the former, mission durations are quite prolonged and for the latter, the necessary laser infrastructure may not be in place by 2030. In this study Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) is examined which has yet to materialise as far as real missions are concerned, but due to its research…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
