NASA has some funding for Nuclear power and propulsion for space and will likely increase it
Nature - Fission power back on NASA’s agenda
Michael Houts, nuclear-research manager at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight
Center, wants astronauts to ride a nuclear reactor to Mars. He is
convinced that small amounts of uranium-235 — which has an energy
density one million times greater than that of liquid fuels — could
power rockets efficiently, using the heat of fission to accelerate small
stores of lightweight hydrogen propellant. This year, he is leading a
nuclear-propulsion project with a budget of US$3 million — minuscule in
comparison with the $1.3 billion that NASA will spend on
space-technology research and development in the 2012 fiscal year. (H/T Hobby Space)
The US National Research Council report (Feb 1, 2012) Space Technology Roadmaps and Priorities is the first ever community-based document to set priorities for NASA’s space-technology division. Nuclear power and propulsion came high on the list.
The US National Research Council report (Feb 1, 2012) Space Technology Roadmaps and Priorities is the first ever community-based document to set priorities for NASA’s space-technology division. Nuclear power and propulsion came high on the list.
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