The term “suitcase nuke” hasn’t enjoyed a particularly popular  connotation in recent years, but researchers convening at the 242nd  National Meeting and Exposition of the American Chemical Society this  week think such a concept is the future of interplanetary space travel. 
Scientists supporting a joint NASA/DOE project to develop future power plants for space colonists  envision the first such power supplies being suitcase-sized fission  reactors that future space explorers could deploy quickly and reliably  in the harsh environs of another planet like Mars.
These mini-reactors would have no cooling towers or billowing steam  clouds emanating from them. Rather, they would stand about two feet tall  and maybe a foot wide, with a compact uranium fission chamber and power  plant tucked inside. 
Unlike the solar panel systems often deployed  aboard interplanetary missions--like the Spirit and Opportunity rovers  currently on Mars--a small fission system could supply the kind of  constant, steady power necessary for human survival on another planet.
That will be key for establishing a beachhead on another planet, as  everything from life support systems (oxygen supplies and carbon dioxide  scrubbing, for instance) to water treatment to keeping the lights and  heat/cooling on will rely on around-the-clock energy. Any lapse in  power, and the humans relying on those systems would quickly find  themselves in a bad way.
Plus, such suitcase nukes would fit neatly in any future space  vehicle’s overhead bins, defraying the cost of checking. The joint  NASA/DOE initiative hopes to produce a working demo unit next year.
 by "environment clean generations"

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