AEM 428 · Liquid Rocket Propulsion Systems

LRPS Design Study

GEO to Lunar transfer. 50,000 kg payload. Hydrogen and oxygen, lit twice.

1,618.54m/s total Delta-v
24,856kg propellant
450 svacuum Isp
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01 — The Problem

A 50,000 kilogram payload.
From geostationary orbit
to the Moon.

Size a liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propulsion system to move a 50,000 kg payload from GEO to a circular lunar orbit using a two-burn Hohmann transfer. Vacuum Isp of 450 seconds. Oxidizer to fuel ratio of 5.5. Ten percent Delta-v margin. One-way.

Givens

02 — The Transfer

Two burns. One ellipse.

A Hohmann transfer connects two coplanar circular orbits with a single ellipse tangent to both. The first burn raises apogee from GEO to lunar distance. The second, 5 days later, circularizes at the Moon. It is the minimum-energy two-impulse transfer between circles.

GEO Lunar Δv1 1053.01 m/s Δv2 565.53 m/s
PhaseParked at GEO
Time elapsedT + 0.0 h
03 — The Math

Six equations, in order.

  1. Vis-viva

    Speed anywhere on any conic orbit, given the gravitational parameter, radius, and semi-major axis. Everything else falls out of this.

  2. Transfer semi-major axis

    The transfer ellipse touches both circular orbits. Its semi-major axis is the average of their radii.

  3. Burn magnitudes

    At perigee, speed up from GEO circular to transfer perigee. At apogee, speed up from transfer apogee to lunar circular. Both burns prograde.

  4. Tsiolkovsky rocket equation

    The tyrant. Exhaust velocity times the log of the mass ratio equals the Delta-v you can achieve. Everything hard about rocketry lives in that logarithm.

  5. Propellant mass

    Invert the rocket equation around dry mass. Given the target Delta-v and the fixed 50,000 kg payload, this is exactly how much propellant you must carry.

  6. Oxidizer and fuel split

    At an O/F of 5.5, roughly 85 percent of the propellant by mass is liquid oxygen. By volume the hydrogen tank is still the monster.

04 — The Numbers

The answer.

Orbital mechanics

0
m/s
vcirc GEO
0
m/s
vcirc Lunar
0
km
atransfer
0
m/s
vperigee
0
m/s
vapogee

Delta-v budget

0
m/s
Δv1 at GEO
0
m/s
Δv2 at Moon
0
m/s
Δvtotal
0
m/s
Δvdesign (+10% margin)

Mass budget

0
m/s
ve exhaust
0
mass ratio m0/mf
0
kg
dry mass mf
0
kg
wet mass m0
0
kg
propellant mp

Propellant split

Liquid Oxygen
21,032kg
18.43m3
Liquid Hydrogen
3,824kg
53.86m3
Mass share Volume share
05 — The Vehicle

Hydrogen is fluffy.

LOX is 16 times denser than LH2. The mass split is five parts oxidizer to one part fuel, but the volume split almost flips. The hydrogen tank dominates the stage.

50,000 kg payload LH2 3,824 kg 53.86 m³ LOX 21,032 kg 18.43 m³ LH2 tank 75% of volume LOX tank 85% of mass Engine Isp 450 s vac Payload 50,000 kg

Why the hydrogen tank dwarfs the LOX tank. Density is the whole story. At 71 kg/m3, liquid hydrogen is one of the least dense cryogens you can carry. LOX at 1,141 kg/m3 is packed tight. So even though you burn 5.5 kg of oxidizer per kg of fuel, the hydrogen needs roughly 2.9 times the tank volume.