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In article ,
Josh Gigantino wrote: While building out a TransHab-type inflatable station module, fill one of the outer layers with up to a meter depth of water. Even 20cm of H2O should help for day-to-day radiation shielding. This should provide a very good shelter against solar storms... 20cm or so of water is a good storm shelter for interplanetary space or high orbit. (There's no point in having it in LEO, which is largely shielded by the magnetosphere.) However, you *don't* want it around your entire living quarters. For one thing, it's very heavy. For another, even 1m of water is not enough to stop heavy cosmic rays and all their secondary particles, which means you quite possibly get a higher radiation dose that way than with no shielding. Unless you can provide complete shielding -- which is probably more like 10t/m^2 than 1t/m^2 -- you want just a compact "storm shelter" area shielded. ...Several layers of water bladders could provide a frozen outer layer and liquids closer to the users - both more comfortable and warmer... Uh, there's no reason why the outer layer would be frozen. In fact, it would probably be difficult to arrange for it to stay frozen. Manned modules generate a lot of heat. (Thermal insulation goes *outside* the pressure shell, for several reasons including the fact that it helps provide micrometeorite protection.) ...For use as a storm shelter, assuming the 1m average shielding, would the hatches/ends need to be blocked off with more shielding? Would bags of water covering the hatches be enough to block the omni-directional solar storm particles? You would want to block the openings of a storm shelter unless they were bent enough that there was no line of sight from interior to exterior. ...Would equpiment inside such a module be able to survive repeated passes (in a highly eccentric orbit) through the Van Allen belts? That's one environment where shielding along these lines might be useful, although I can't quote numbers off the top of my head. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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Henry Spencer wrote:
You would want to block the openings of a storm shelter unless they were bent enough that there was no line of sight from interior to exterior. Even if they were bent, wouldn't you still get lots of radiation via Compton scattering? -- Keith F. Lynch - http://keithlynch.net/ Please see http://keithlynch.net/email.html before emailing me. |
#4
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A group of engineers including David Cavalieri were granted a patent
on this very idea a few years ago. That patent is owned by Bigelow Aerospace. Anthony Zupperro had an idea for a PBO bag that would be a nuclear powered steam rocket "ice ship" even earlier. The existence of prior art and the previously mentioned problems, (That much water is heavy and it won't stop all cosmic rays) is all true, making the value of the patent very dubious indeed. NASA had a very small storm shelter baselined inside the transhab for use during the infrequent and unpredictable solar proton storms from the sun for long duration missions like the 9 month chemical rocket transit from earth to mars. |
#5
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In article ,
Keith F. Lynch wrote: You would want to block the openings of a storm shelter unless they were bent enough that there was no line of sight from interior to exterior. Even if they were bent, wouldn't you still get lots of radiation via Compton scattering? My impression is that this isn't a big issue at the energies of interest, but I could be wrong -- I haven't looked into the details. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
#6
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In article ,
Josh Gigantino wrote: 20cm or so of water is a good storm shelter for interplanetary space or high orbit. (There's no point in having it in LEO... 20cm is enough for shelter from solar storms? Probably, yes -- it depends a little bit on what assumptions you make and how conservative you are. ...For cosmic rays (from your previous posts on subject), they basically scatter into highly ionized pieces that do more damage in tissue. Is there a way to shield against them? Something like M2P2 or that rad-plastic in the space news lately? Nothing that will stop them reliably in a short distance, I fear. The energies are still pretty high and they're fairly penetrating. For LEO, would you recommend a foam-only TransHab? What about the HEEO orbit I mention, and flights to Mars/asteroids? For LEO, it depends a little on which LEO you're in, but by and large you don't need a lot of shielding. For an orbit passing through the belts with any regularity, you'd need a bunch, but I don't have numbers on hand. Out in deep space, you want either complete shielding (5-10t/m^2, impossibly heavy for near-future vehicles) or else a small shielded storm shelter and relatively little shielding on the rest. Uh, there's no reason why the outer layer would be frozen. In fact, it would probably be difficult to arrange for it to stay frozen. Manned modules generate a lot of heat... What kind of processes could utilize this heat? There isn't really anything terribly practical, because it's at quite low temperatures, which makes exploiting it fundamentally difficult. About all you can do is get rid of it, and even that's a nuisance, since you need quite a bit of radiator area. (That's what the inside surfaces of the shuttle cargo-bay doors are, for example.) ...Waste heat and available water could be used for humidity control. Humidity control in a manned spacecraft with a recirculating air system generally means dehumidification, not humidification. Human bodies put out substantial amounts of water vapor. Would the water (plus several layers of kevlar, bladders, etc) provide enough meteorite/impact protection? The way to protect against micrometeorites (and in LEO, space debris) is with multiple thin "bumper" shields spaced well out from the main hull. It's helpful to add low-density material, e.g. thermal insulation, in the gaps... but the #1 way to improve the protection is to make the gaps *wider*. An incoming object hits the first shield and turns into an expanding cloud of plasma and fragments, and the more time that cloud has to expand before it reaches the next layer, the less chance that enough of it will hit in one place to penetrate. Wider gaps are more effective than more mass, and multiple thin walls are more effective than one thick wall. ...People are always saying that the Van Allen belts are life-threatening, it seems like a good way to provide protection. Would the 20cm (or 50?) around equipment and personnel be enough? (I know you don't have numbers handy, just ballpark) Gut feeling, 20cm isn't enough but 50cm might be. Would it be correct that a HEEO application might be the only reasonable use of this type of inflatable? Would it actually be more dangerous than a foam-filled inflatable (cosmic ray damage) on a Mars mission? Right, you *don't* want to live inside 20cm of shielding in deep space, because the cosmic-ray-secondary dose inside that sort of shield is rather higher than the cosmic-ray-primary dose outside it. Only when a giant solar flare temporarily changes the outside environment for the worse do you retreat inside, and that fortunately is rare. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
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In article ,
Tim McDaniel wrote: The way to protect against micrometeorites (and in LEO, space debris) is with multiple thin "bumper" shields spaced well out... I take it that that doesn't work for cosmic rays -- enough shielding far out to break up the cosmic ray particles, and distance from the bumper shields to let time take care of the cosmic ray fragments? That could only work if the fragments were almost all slow or almost all very quick to decay. Alas, cosmic rays are very energetic, and so many of the secondaries are moving very fast and go a long way before decaying. The showers of secondaries from cosmic rays being stopped in the upper atmosphere are easily detected on the ground; in fact, the muon and the pion were both first discovered as cosmic-ray secondaries. Also, some of the eventual decay products would themselves remain dangerous, e.g. fragments of nuclei might decay a little but wouldn't disappear. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
#8
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In article ,
John wrote: Right, you *don't* want to live inside 20cm of shielding in deep space, because the cosmic-ray-secondary dose inside that sort of shield is rather higher than the cosmic-ray-primary dose outside it. Would you even want to live *near* such a structure? Since the cosmic rays come from all directions, won't many of them traverse both 20cm walls and creating a shower of secondary particles radiating away from the storm shelter? Indeed they would. It would be *less* of an issue outside the shelter, because only the cosmic rays coming from the far side of the shelter would be an issue, whereas inside the shelter you're getting it from all sides. But it would be preferable to locate the shelter away from normal sleeping and working quarters. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
#9
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In article ,
Travis P wrote: ...center of the ship is the water storage tanks, but the tanks have storage rooms in the centers that are surrounded by the water. When needed, the entire crew can fit in there for days at a time. Uncomfortable, but it's good dual use. One problem would be the diminished quantity of water towards the end of the mission. Fortunately, both food -- even dehydrated -- and human wastes have plenty of water content, so you can use them for storm-shelter shielding. -- "Think outside the box -- the box isn't our friend." | Henry Spencer -- George Herbert | |
#10
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