AnotherDilbert
Emperor Mongoose
I meant that I agree that we are talking about that speeds that large and the drag would be rather high (the absurd part).fusor said:AnotherDilbert said:My basic assumption was that we can choose the density of the hydrogen atmosphere by choosing the altitude at which we are skimming. 40 km/s is a rather absurd speed, but I hoped that by choosing a very low density we could still get a reasonable flow over the hull and into the scopes. Perhaps such a low density will yield insufficient fuel?
40 km/s may sound absurd, but it's about how fast the Galileo orbiter was going when it was deorbited into Jupiter's atmosphere (I think it was going more like 50 km/s actually). And that pretty much just 'fell in', it just picked up that speed from Jupiter's gravity as it dove in on its final orbit.
But with a very low atmospheric density the energy transfer would still be manageable?
An icy moon or asteroid is perhaps better, but probably takes more time?
"More time" is probably infinitely preferable over "very likely ship destruction" and "wrestling with a huge gravity well". And most gas giants have icy moons anyway.

If it takes a few hours it's fast enough, if it takes a few days it's probably usable, but if it takes a few weeks too slow.