

AckSed
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Spectrometers. Large and heavy lab equipment that needs miracles of miniaturisation to fit into space probes and telescopes. Well, not any more. With Fresnel optics you can cram one inside a bullet-sized probe, and scatter-shoot multiple all over a crater: https://www.universetoday.com/168591/could-you-find-what-a-lunar-crater-is-made-of-by-shooting-it/
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No "probably" about it: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Zl_B_IbC_UFx4VfFamhCQcGgUdtk64r6wOdQ_wO3lHU/ That is a dataset of the 160 different semiconductors that have been grown into crystals in microgravity since Skylab. Here's the meta-analysis that shows that of the 140 with data, and depending on crystal-growing method, 80% showed an improvement in at least one of being more uniform in distribution, including dopants, with better structure and smaller voids and/or improved performance. 50% grew larger crystals: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41526-024-00410-7.pdf So yes, there's fertile grounds for research. Some of these (I'm personally eyeing the copper-aluminium) would be excellent for ISRU electronics and power circuitry.
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
AckSed replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Quite a few, so I'll cover some of the similarities first. Both are ancient, being cultivated as far back as 9000BC at least, both belong to the Triticeae family, and both were and are grown for beer and animal feed. Barley prefers growing in lower temperatures. Domesticated wheat has gluten, which helped the Egyptians make a more springy bread with the addition of yeast. Barley bread was and is a dense, gummy mouthful. Barley, in my part of the woods, makes for an essential addition to vegetable soup as a thickener. It has fair amounts of niacin and thiamine, though not as much as some wheats. Wheat has much more protein than barley, though it is not readily absorbed. It is also deficient in lysine, which means that it was often consumed with legumes (peas, beans, lentils). Wheat has a much more tangled family tree, being inbred and crossbred with other plants for drought resistance, suitability for bread and disease resistance. To this day, most of the barley humans use for food go into alcoholic drinks-making. -
Actually that gives me an idea... How much of a refuellable people-carrier could this lift? We know BO is investigating propellant depots. A modified Dreamchaser (or something entirely new) could continue the tourism business and cart people up to Orbital Reef. Maybe to the moon with refuelling.
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Speaking of development, overexcitable YT thumbnail said that they might be switching to new, orange version of the tiles, but I haven't seen any hint of this. Any credibility?
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For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
AckSed replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
No proof, but the first space-fart came the first time there was a human in space, because a drop in pressure to oh, low-pressure pure oxygen usually means any trapped gas working its way out. First 'proper' pooper? The first space toilet was on Skylab, so the first one would have been one out of Pete Conrad, Joseph P. Kerwin or Paul J. Weitz of SkyLab 2. Apparently, farts (and sneezes) were a problem because you, well, jetted off. If you were peeing at the same time... "disaster". -
totm jan 2025 Optimal size for domes and other structures
AckSed replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
I have to say thank you as well, it's been fascinating to see an architect go at habitat design. I might not always agree with it, but it's exploring the problem-space in a new way. -
Chinese Space Program (CNSA) & Ch. commercial launch and discussion
AckSed replied to tater's topic in Science & Spaceflight
A methalox F9-equivalent would be a pretty good constellation-builder. The advantage of cryogenic fuels is in the refurbishment, with minimal cleaning of the engines needed. -
The actual proposal: http://www.geoffreylandis.com/lightsail/Lightsail89.html The force on the deceleration stage would feel the incident pressure, but would not cancel out, as the light-collecting area of the first stage is greater, and all of that would (somehow) be focused on the deceleration stage... aaand it's been answered. :-) Dealing with the energy focused on this smaller sail would be another problem. The proposal was to use dielectric mirrors made of refractory substances that reflects 99.5% of the energy with minimal absorption, and can take extreme temperatures. Personally, if you have these fancy focusing arrays on the sail, I think you could leverage Y. K. Bae's photonic thrusters by coating the back of the deceleration sail with a thin-film laser gain medium. That way, you have a laser cavity that bounces the light back and forth, recuperating the energy and increasing the thrust with less thermal load. They do say that a staged array of a hundred 500km lenses would be more achievable.
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ISRO launches a robotic two-satellite mission designed to test docking technologies... called SpaDeX: https://spacenews.com/india-launches-space-docking-experiment-with-pslv-rocket-advancing-major-ambitions/ Well done for the pun, but it's a groaner.
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Chinese Space Program (CNSA) & Ch. commercial launch and discussion
AckSed replied to tater's topic in Science & Spaceflight
https://spacenews.com/china-to-debut-new-long-march-and-commercial-rockets-in-2025/ Mostly kerelox, a few methalox, one or two solids... and a case of research institutions designing two different-ish rockets. CALT has proposed the ol' reliable kerelox Long March 8A, while SAST is going for the gold ring with possible new methalox engines and a VTVL test for the Long March 12A. -
For Questions That Don't Merit Their Own Thread
AckSed replied to Skyler4856's topic in Science & Spaceflight
No master list for everything. This gives a fair approximation: https://www.factoriesinspace.com/ We may have some rather mad ideas tried, and most will fail. No-one in the industry saw Starlink's breadth and scale succeeding, though OneWeb was first, and Iridium and Echostar satellite telephones were before that. Any in-space manufactory that orbits the Earth is a potential application. There are lots of things that are difficult or downright impossible inside a gravity well, that are easier in orbit: crystallisation is the big one, as that's the final stage behind forging, semiconductors, pharmaceuticals and more. In microgravity it's more controlled and even. You can also magnetically or electrostatically suspend materials without touching the walls of the crucible, while heating it in freely-available vacuum - a further advantage for semiconductor manufacturing. Then you can take your boule and go home. Cargo storage in, and delivery from, orbit is an application I couldn't quite believe, but the USA's Space Force is throwing money around to make this Helldivers mechanic happen IRL. Cheap mass to orbit may be the dawn of Big Dumb Flat-pack Satellites, and K2 Space are hopefully building the bus for your application. Cheap kick-stages and on-orbit delivery vehicles to higher orbits will eventually lead to true space-tugs, that shift satellites around, reboost and/or refuel from depots. This may also lead to high-impulse rocket engines. What else... The classic wishlist of any astronomer - larger telescopes. However, someone will have to stick their neck out and volunteer to sell a mass-produced version. Cheaper cube-sat versions are being proposed, but some entrepreneur with more gumption than brains could break into this (small?) market. Asteroid mining will have to be after higher-impulse engines, or cheaper space-tugs, or both. -
totm jan 2025 Optimal size for domes and other structures
AckSed replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
There are some initiatives to make a bioregenerative, fully-closed life-support system: ESA has been refining a bacteriological-technological system, MELiSSA, for years while NASA founded CUBES in 2017 to study genetically-modified microorganisms as part of the LSS, with an eye towards food, therapeutic pharmaceuticals and bioplastics, with oxygen as a side-product. The atmosphere, and the potential dust and soil and mould problems seem to be shoved to the side with, "We're working the food and waste problem! Hell with it, the ISS system is Good Enough, use that." Personally, I think a partial open-loop system that recovers water, nitrogen and heat, bubbles the waste atmosphere through a supercritical water reactor to sterilise before venting, and takes in oxygen from the regolith electrolysis and/or CO2 electrolysis would also be Good Enough. Perhaps something like activated carbon could be produced from the left-over carbon, as it's used in an extruded form to filter noxious odours and chlorine. -
Impacting at 2% c, though... that's when solid matter stops being matter and begins to approach plasma. Maybe even fusion fuel. No idea how you make a crasher stage for that. But to bring it back, the key here is to send a train of the presumably mass-produced probes, passing through the focal point one after the other.
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To paraphrase a certain spaceman: Spaceplane! Spaceplane! SPACEPLANE!
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Son of a booster, they did it.
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totm jan 2025 Optimal size for domes and other structures
AckSed replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Geothermal might work - in the right place. The Cerberus Fossae has all the signs of an active magma plume the size of the United States underneath it: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/12/221205121545.htm Even if you don't use it to generate power, boring down to tap it for hab heating and factory process heat is viable, as there are companies that make heatpumps for these applications. Ground-source heatpumps: https://www.kensaheatpumps.com/is-a-ground-source-heat-pump-right-for-you/ Overview of steam-generating heatpumps of various types: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0196890423012281 ---- Regarding ISRU batteries, there are battery chemistries of differing complexities and capabilities. The most basic would probably be nickel-iron, as popularised by Edison. Good: very tough and long-lasting, easy to make. Bad: lose charge faster than other chemistries, uses water and sulphuric acid as electrolyte. Lead-acid is similar, but slightly better. Lead-mining on Mars is probably a no-go, though. Molten sodium-sulphur or NAS batteries are a small fraction of grid-storage batteries on Earth, and an early electric car used them as well, because they are simple to make and use readily-available materials: steel, aluminia, elemental sulphur, sodium metal. The show-stopper is that you have to keep them hot with insulation and integrated heating elements. Not so bad on Earth, more difficult on Mars but not impossible. Personally I'd use vacuum-insulation panels or, failing that, basalt-fibre mats. Other molten-salt or low-melting metal chemistries are possible: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molten-salt_battery ---Past this point we move out of possible workshop or small factory bootstrap construction and into needing to import factory equipment.--- Lithium-iron phosphate (LFP) is the current champion of grid storage, and the elements can be obtained on Mars. It's probably even easier to make the synthetic graphite from the readily-available CO2. The electrolyte and the water used is a problem, though. Sodium-ion batteries are a much newer thing, but already attracting attention for the availability of the base materials and the possibility of solid electrolytes. Lower energy density, though we don't particularly care if it's being used for stationary storage. -
totm jan 2025 Optimal size for domes and other structures
AckSed replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Found the paper: https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1070838/ -
I read the entire thing. Man, I think I experienced roughly the same feelings reading it: glad you had the opportunity, wincing at the mess-ups. I sympathise with feeling out of your depth at uni, though not to the extent of working on hardware that was made to be launched. All I did was a BSc in Internet Computing circa 2009, and my ill-chosen final-year project nearly broke me. (Don't choose fuzzy-logic when you barely know how to make a database.) I would like to hear "How not to design for assembly" next.
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Tiny payload ready for launch on massive rocket: https://www.blueorigin.com/news/blue-ring-pathfinder-payload
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The water collected after passing through the catalyst has enough ammonia to add to the plants to supply the nitrogen they need. So if you had a drip-feeder or hydroponics mister for the plant's roots, this could be added to the apparatus. The Nafion polymer is, surprisingly, the pricey part due to its production cost.
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totm jan 2025 Optimal size for domes and other structures
AckSed replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Hang on, could we use hesco bag construction? Very quick, very simple, flat-packed cubical fibreglass bags made to be filled with dirt to construct walls. Combine it with locally-quarried stone beams and pillars, or a composite inner frame, plus an inflatable pressure vessel inside, more overfill on the top, and you have a home. More whimsically, I'm imagining triple-glazed windows inset into the sides that double as 1 metre-thick water tanks. -
totm jan 2025 Optimal size for domes and other structures
AckSed replied to farmerben's topic in Science & Spaceflight
Efficient, yes. Nice to live in? Hmm. One design I saw for a Mars hab was to, essentially, have a sod regolith roof atop a bungalow, and use mirrors to reflect sunlight into the interior. It'd need sturdy construction and maybe cleaning of the mirrors after a dust storm, but if you're making and shaping steel and glass and plastic on-site (and we could and should) it's no hardship to build tough. We have robots that brush dust off solar panels on desert solar farms, so those could be adapted for the mirrors.