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A new route to Mars proposes to solve the two big problems that have held humans back from getting there — the cost of the journey and the fact that it can only done every two years.
The current route requires a huge amount of fuel to be used. It also can only happen once every 26 months, when the planets line up in the right way.
But a new path worked out by mathematicians Francesco Topputo and Edward Belbruno makes use of the motion of Mars, helping with both problems.
Space in perspective: this is how big the Earth really is compared to the other planets in our Solar System
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It requires lobbing the ship into an orbit like that of Mars so that it flies ahead of the planet, called ballistic capture. That is instead of the Hohmann transfer that’s currently used, where the spaceship is aimed at a certain place in the Mars orbit and meets it there.
The two techniques costs the same at launch and while it cruises. But the expensive burn of fuel to slow down and aim when the ship reaches Mars is reduced.
The 25 per cent less fuel used will reduce costs, and will make the ship lighter and therefore even cheaper to launch.
But the new route takes a few months longer, and even on the old route the journey takes six months.
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