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Scotius wrote:
Helium 3 can be fused like hydrogen, and can provide tremendous energy. It also has a far lower fusion reaction temperature than hydrogen Uhh... sorry, but the ignition temperature for D-3He fusion is about ten times *higher* than that for D-T, which we're far from mastering. Not that that has slowed the hatching of a thousand confident plans for PROFITS IN SPAAAAAAAAAAAAACE... |
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On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 22:35:16 -0700, Scotius wrote:
There is water on the moon, which could be broken down into hydrogen and oxygen to fuel a rocket engine for travel farther out than the moon, That would be an insane waste of the tiny amount of hydrogen on the moon. All the water on the moon is going to be needed right there, as part of a growing colony's ecosystem. If you want rocket fuel, refining lunar rock into O2 and light alkali metals (sodium is plentiful, energetic and not useful for much else) makes incomparably more sense. There's too much sodium in lunar soil for agriculture, so extracting it for use as rocket fuel is the natural choice. and there are also vast deposits of helium 3 on the moon. Helium 3 can be fused like hydrogen, and can provide tremendous energy. It also has a far lower fusion reaction temperature than hydrogen, so it looks doable as an energy system for a potential moon base. This is speculation. For the foreseeable future, solar and perhaps fission nuclear will be the energy sources for a moon base. They better have a better reason for wanting to set one up than to beat the Chinese there however. Actually, a lot of progress has been made for such reasons. We don't need another Cold War if it can be avoided. Reality check: nations have rivalries, and that is not going to go away in this century. Better that they compete scientifically and economically in space than militarily here on earth. -- Roy L |
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100 billion dollars later, and we'll have some more moon rocks for
science classes. |
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Fact Attack,
Try 500 billion and, in addition to our obtaining all of those nifty moon rocks which will be exactly like the megatonnes of our once upon a time icy proto-moon rock that's already situated upon Earth, and since thy insist upon working the moon under to full blazing and extremely raw solar influx plus whatever physical influx to boot, as such they'll also have contributed all of those TBI and nicely perforated astronaut bodily organs to study, and perhaps still not having deployed one interactive scientific nor astronomy instrument as could have been robotically up and running upon the lunar surface as of decades ago, much less accomplishing any of those energy efficient and extremely high data throughput interplanetary/interstellar laser cannon transponders, or God forbid allowing anything the least bit related to Earth science. Meanwhile, Russia and China having been establishing their one and only LSE-CM/ISS right over our silly moonsuit noses. Naturally, if it weren't for "NASAs disinformation campaign" plus utter lack of their being Johny on the spot with getting raw data directly extracted from the lunar surface, as such we'd already know a whole lot more than another thing or two about our moon. Here's another one of my gravity and surface-tension related contributions that's still formulated in basic kg or gram format, as this time having to do with folks interested in getting a few small but otherwise highly effective instruments safely deployed upon our moon. Thus meanwhile back at the Guth ranch of being as much as possible on-topic, such as per going "back to the moon by 2018", while so many others are continually going off-track by remaining focused upon defending their mindset and ulterior motives of whatever suits their pagan NASA/Apollo Koran, and/or of their social/religious and political brown-nosed bigotry status quo, whereas I'm into honestly wondering what's technically possible and/or just affordably doable without busting the bank nor further polluting mother Earth to a much greater fairlywell by that method of our having to R&D those massive to/from lunar landers for the daunting and extremly spendy task of sending astronauts to/from the moon. If we or even robots are to be going back to the moon, especially by lunar daytime, then it might actually become a darn good idea as to our knowing; How hot the moon. If we're talking about certain substantially dark portions of the moon as being not more than 5% reflective, in other words nearly coal black and thus taking in 95% of the 1.4 kw/m2, and if that sort of dark basalt and carbon soot covered surface were to be nicely covered with a crystal clear layer/lens of several meters worth of Rn-222 gas, then also as having been well insulated on all sides by those amounts of supposedly clumping bone dry moon-dust, whereas that should insure the dark substances should continue to rise in temperature well past the 150=B0C mark. At least I believe that's the result of what should be accomplished upon Earth that's typically getting a little more than half the amount of thermal influx upon the surface of Earth to work with. There's also the secondary energy as having been radiated from the surrounding territory, whereas at a IR albedo of reflecting 25% would have to be contributing a little something extra worth of thermal energy. The near-surface population of Rn-222 atoms should be considerable though perhaps not amounting to much greater than a few meters worth, however possibly at times as great as a km worth that's topped off with a sparse amount of crystal clear argon is another insulative consideration that we'll all have to learn more about, along with the variable in solar winds and thermal extremes that's making the lunar atmosphere anything but a constant. Even Rn-222 becomes a liquid state if not frozen into solid form in lunar nighttime, although the near vacuum of the lunar surface may somehow prevent those alternate phases of radon gas. Of course, if there's actually a near vacuum of 3e-13 kPa (3e-15 bar) as supposedly the entire moon having a mere 25 tonnes in total atmosphere to work with shouldn't retain all that much thermal energy so easily, especially while having to keep up with Earth at 30 km/s and otherwise with a 300+km/s solar wind (guesting to 2400 km/s) passing by from time to time. So, my latest question is; exactly how much depth and/or total mass of the Rn-222 gas does the moon have to work with? What's the spectrum color (if any) of a fully saturated Rn-222 atmosphere? Perhaps if we actually could manage to safely deploy a little something that's interactive without having that deployment involve vaporising itself upon impact, as then we'd all learn another thing or two about our lunar environment, that which under the best of circumstance has got to be downright nasty, that's otherwise robotically survivable. Of course, within the last couple of decades we could have deployed the sorts of hard-science instruments that shouldn't have amounted to much greater than one kg, whereas a fairly large area and if need be inflated mylar parachute should have easily gotten such light weight times affordably and safely onto our dusty and reactive lunar surface, thus capable of reporting back to Earth with at least hourly data packets of pressure, temperature and most certainly a basic level of foreground/background X-ray radiation info. As of today that kg package could have included a reasonably good 2.25 micron/pixel full color CCD camera, surface seismic/acoustic detections, a full range of spectrum data including the amounts of various radiation and that of detecting any number of available though rarefied elements passing by, as being fully solar/PV cell recharged to boot so that minute by minute packets would be available by day and at least hourly by nighttime/earthshine. I can't hardly imagine that any one kg delivered package amounting to more than a 10 kg compartment stowed item as having been rocket delivered from an extremely low orbit, thus representing a fairly small overall rocket delivery method hosting perhaps 100 of these little suckers could be released along the lowest possible orbit path as their delivery method makes a one-time de-orbit retrothrust maneuver at perhaps 10 km off the deck, whereas that 10 km mark is perhaps where the lunar atmosphere should (at a velocity of something less than 2 km/s) represent enough atmospheric mass/m2 and thus drag as per keeping inflated the individual spinning delivery method of what should have easily exposed the entire worth of whatever each of these mylar parachutes could then take the fullest possible advantage of whatever there is to grab onto. Here's my plan-A; at 1/6th G and perhaps using a 36 meter diameter aerobreaking method that's offered by better than a 1000 m2 mylar parachute is why there's not going to be all that much combined mass involved with having to slow the final velocity down to something less than 10 m/s, that is unless there truly isn't any of the radon or other heavy gas elements to work with, in which case those 1 kg items as having 1.623 m/s/s going against their survival will likely impact at something greater than 2.5 km/s (better luck next time). If the 1 kg probe were to be somehow situated upon the top side of the parachute, whereas this method could even help to support the final resting upon an otherwise extremely low surface-tension of perhaps offering as little as 5 g/cm2, thus a kg item might require a 3.34 m2 as being necessary due to the lesser gravity where 1 kg becomes a factor of 167 grams with a final velocity of that mass having to come into contact at 10 m/s should represent a maximum of 16.7 kg (or perhaps it's actually half that amount) within the first ms of impact, whereas otherwise the lunar dry-quicksand as representing a micro form of powder/dust that has been well documented as previously enveloping other deployed instruments that were unfortunately considerably massive, though these extremely light weight items having a large enough surface contact pad area shouldn't sink out of sight. Besides a centrifugal deployed mylar parachute, there's another interesting notion of a "Ballute" as an inflated form of aerobreaking for getting relatively small items safely deployed where a conventional parachute may not represent the best all around ticket to ride. http://www.tsgc.utexas.edu/archive/subsystems/aero.pdf - This is actually another highly interesting notion of a worthy topic that's anything but original. http://groups.google.com/group/uk.ph...rm/thread/a47= 40ef840094820/1191e16695fda8e8?hl=3Den#1191e16695fda8e8 "Voyage to the stars" by Leonard David, http://groups.google.com/group/uk.ph...rm/thread/2aa= 1dc4f5d3ab04b/b873b6cb7472d3ea?lnk=3Dst&q=3Dion+thruster&rnum=3D 8&hl=3Den#b= 873b6cb7472d3ea That's certainly not such a bad notion "To send a spacecraft where none has gone before is a dream assignment for any space scientist and engineer." However, I believe what's to be needed is a great deal of speed and thus a great deal of applied thrust, at least until passing the nullification point of no return, such as the mutual gravity-well that's situated between our solar system and that of the Sirius star system might prove most gravity attractive. Perhaps there's another perfectly good reason as to first "go back to the moon" for obtaining a large amount of Ra-226 so that a ion gas of Rn-222 becomes the medium by which thrust is maximum/kj. Ionized radon plasma could become our the next best form of powerful ion thrusters. Although the radon thrust itself could be invisible, it's greater density as a gas, liquid or frozen substance seems rather interesting since radon is something that's not exactly all that hard to come by, yet as far as I can tell Earth and we humans upon it could do without the likes of radon. One method of artificially creating radon while on the fly is with having a cash of radium which isn't exactly all that available upon Earth but, perhaps upon our moon could represent megatonnes of radium (Ra-226). Thereby the Rn-222/ion plasma thrusters of what a moon base of operations could represent could become the very best alternative, especially since by then solar/PV cell energy/m2 should be more than adequate for ionizing radon into a substantial plasma flow. Getting whatever back up into lunar orbit shouldn't be all that testy, and of course so much easier yet with the LSE-CM/ISS accomplishing the simple and energy efficient elevator to/from task of getting whatever products and/or folks from the lunar surface into the ME-L1/EM-L2 gravity free trade zone. I'm thinking 222/131 =3D 1.71 fold thrust improvement over using Xenon and, a greater than 800 fold improvement in thrust duration due to utilizing a sufficient cash of Ra-226 on behalf of producing the Rn-222 on the fly, thus a 1360:1 overall improvement, which seems perfectly nifty for a interstellar probe that could be making 10% light speed once getting itself gravity pulled towards the next available star system. Meaning that we could use Sirius a velocity booster for sending that speedy probe far beyond. Radium (Ra-226) offers a half life of 1600 years http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/ra.html http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/xe.html http://www.chemicalelements.com/elements/rn.html ~ Life upon Venus, a township w/Bridge & ET/UFO Park-n-Ride Tarmac: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-town.htm The Russian/China LSE-CM/ISS (Lunar Space Elevator) http://guthvenus.tripod.com/lunar-space-elevator.htm Venus ETs, plus the updated sub-topics; Brad Guth / GASA-IEIS http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-topics.htm War is war, thus "in war there are no rules" - In fact, war has been the very reason of having to deal with the likes of others that haven't been playing by whatever rules, such as GW Bush. |
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Fact Attack ) wrote:
: 100 billion dollars later, and we'll have some more moon rocks for : science classes. I'd rather repeat Apollo every generation rather than Vietnam. Iraq is there and so are we, we've yet to go back to the moon in this generation. Besides, eventually something will come of it. We may have to do this five more times before we establish a base. So what! It took 400+ years for Columbus to follow the Vikings back to the New World. No on said it had to work in your lifetime. Eric |
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Eric Chomko (aka Sponge Bob rusemaster and all knowing wizard of Oz);
Your all knowing leader and resident commander in chief warlord has just blown trillions down the nearest space-toilet, gotten tens of thousands of innocent folks (mostly Muslims) quit prematurely dead and or dying as we speak, set science and humanity back by decades and gotten half the badly polluted and global warming world to hate our energy sucking guts. If it wasn't for what that sicko incest Skull and Bones ******* has done and is intending to do without a stitch of remorse, your NASA would have had those hundreds upon hundreds of billions to spend each and every year, and we'd be walking on Mars even before we manage to walk upon the moon. ~ Kurt Vonnegut would have to agree; WAR is WAR, thus "in war there are no rules" - In fact, war has been the very reason of having to deal with the likes of others that haven't been playing by whatever rules, such as GW Bush. Life upon Venus, a township w/Bridge & ET/UFO Park-n-Ride Tarmac: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-town.htm The Russian/China LSE-CM/ISS (Lunar Space Elevator) http://guthvenus.tripod.com/lunar-space-elevator.htm Venus ETs, plus the updated sub-topics; Brad Guth / GASA-IEIS http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-topics.htm |
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Scotius;
We don't need another Cold War if it can be avoided. Sorry my friend, as it seems that our MI6/NSA~NASA has had it dead wrong from their very perpetrated cold-war get-go, and that's as of nearly 4 decades ago which isn't by any means over with until our fat lady sings or even one of them Apollo cows comes home. Otherwise you're right as to what's seriously good about getting at least robotically established and of exporting really nifty stuff away from the moon. Too bad we can't seem to figure out how to get our LSE-CM/ISS up and running before others manage to accomplish that feat which is a whole lot simpler and safer than accommodating fools walking upon our moon. Ray; People are not perfect and make mistakes. The people who work for NASA are no different. People deserve a chance to learn from their mistakes. Sorry folks but, our MI6/NSA~NASA hasn't learned a damn thing, other than how to brown-nose and cover their butts at the same time whenever they're running out of money or having an insufficient number of astronauts to roast. I dont think 100 billion dollars is a lot of money for going back to the moon over 13 years. Try 500+ billions, and that's only if nothing goes terribly wrong. Its the best architecture. Why gamble with new concepts when we dont have that much money. We already tried that with the space shuttle. This time it's also imposing 13 years worth of LLPOF plus more than their fair share of spendy R&D crapolla than you or I can shake a flaming stick at. Thus also another 13+ years worth of polluting mother Earth to a rather nasty tune of 100,000:1. A thousand tonnes as situated upon the moon equals at least a hundred million tonnes worth of some of the worse known pollution you can imagine for our environment (what's that going to be worth?). Just an orbiting space probe can be worth generating 1000:1 tonnes of crapolla that we humans upon Earth must accept and pay for with our lives if need be. Josh Hill; What I see there is vagueness: What I see is MOS LLPOF dog-wagging and infomercial damage-control on steroids, and certainly way more than our fair share of status quo brown-nosed sucking and blowing at the same time. Before Russia or whomever can hope to mine squat and much less He3 from the moon, perhaps a few and relatively small robotic missions need to make the grade by way of their surviving a sufficiently soft landing long enough to provide science and the resulting R&D folks that'll be encharge of the serious robotics that'll be required, thus sharing some real good data that's as hard of science as can be had about the lunar environment without someone having to die for merely attempting to walk upon the moon that in of itself provides absolutely no benefit to science, other than perhaps demonstrating upon a method of safely getting rid of certain humans as astronauts that were too dumbfounded as to tie their own shoe laces anyway. At least robotically mining the moon may have become a bit easier than we'd thought. However, before we common folk and the likes of "tj Frazir" and myself (in other words the apparent scum of the Earth according to whatever the mainstream status quo has to say) can fully appreciate "What's actually HOT and NASTY about Venus", whereas instead we may need to regress ourselves by a few decades in order to fully appreciate the hard-science that's recently become available as pertaining to what's actually all that HOT and NASTY about our Moon? I believe the task of getting whatever safely and thus having to softly deploy items upon the extremely dusty moon is going to be doable as long as those forms of robotics are small enough so as to being least massive, so as to slowing the arrival of them suckers down to perhaps 10 m/s and, they are of a sufficient surface coverage configuration so as to not summarily sink out of sight. Earth's atmosphere at sea level is worthy of 3e19 molecules/cm3 or 3e25 atoms/m3. Moon's average surface atmosphere is supposely 2e7 molecules/cm3 or 2e13 atoms/m3. Although element wise, the near surface atmosphere of the moon should also be hosting of good deal of whatever's between that of Radon and O2 that's in addition to the rather robust populations of sodium that's not exactly an element in short supply. "Wilson and his colleagues at Boston University, led by Prof. Michael Mendillo, routinely monitor the Moon's tail. They use extraordinarily sensitive cameras that can detect sunlight scattered from as few as 5 sodium atoms per cubic centimeter." "I think we'll look back years from now and realize that 1998 was very special," agrees Wilson. "The fireballs on Earth were unique and we've never detected another meteor-related enhancement of the Moon's tail. That includes 1999 when the sheer number of Leonids hitting the Moon was probably much higher than the year before. Even in '98, when the sodium density tripled two days after the shower (that's how long it takes for sodium to travel down the tail the length of the Moon's orbit), the enhancement didn't last long. The sodium tail faded back to normal within 24 hours. "David Asher and Rob McNaught predict as many as 10,000 meteors per hour on Earth and similar numbers of impacts on the Moon." For another example upon what's good about our extremely nearby moon; the lunar sodium atmosphere that's certainly been a whole lot thicker as of lately and offering so much greater expanse than you'd think possioble if going purely by the molecular speed as given by the molecular mass and temperature, whereas for appreciating such is why we obviously need a surface instrument reading of what's what, and not that of another remote estimate as obtained from such instruments in orbit. Actually a very small and energy efficient pulsed laser beam emitting device would have done the trick as of more than 3 decades ago, or that of a focused Xenon strobe as of 4 decades ago. At least the math proves that such photon energy would have been easily detected by the most amateur of observations. Even the notions of them Russians and/or the Chinese robotically mining the moon may have always been a bit easier to accompliush than we'd thought. However, before we common folk, the likes of "tj Frazir" and myself (in other words the apparent scum of the Earth according to whatever the mainstream status quo has to say) can fully appreciate "What's actually HOT and NASTY about Venus", whereas instead we may need to regress ourselves by a few decades in order to fully appreciate the hard-science that's recently become available as pertaining to what's actually all that HOT and NASTY as well as surmountable about our Moon? The task of their getting whatever safely and thus having to softly deploy items upon the extremely dusty moon is doable as long as those forms of robotics are being kept small and light enough so as to being least massive, so as to slowing the arrival of them suckers down to perhaps 10 m/s and, they are still that of a sufficient surface coverage configuration so as to not summarily sink out of sight as did previous attempts. Besides the raw solar influx aspects of 1.4 kw/m2 scorching continuously upon most any given portion of the moon for nearly a month at a time, thus getting whatever's dark and nasty extremely hot and not to mention damn reactive as all get out. How about for the all around sporting heck of it all, lets say we jump off the mainstream status quo good ship LOLLIPOP that's been entirely owned and operated by our NASA/Apollo rusemasters, in order to discuss our going back to our moon for the very first time, so as to get an honest to God grasp upon whatever the lunar atmosphere is actually all about. Of course, I'm speaking robotically since it's usually so downright hot, reactive and physically nasty or otherwise just damn cold and nasty upon our moon, not to mention that robotics are certainly a whole lot cheaper than clumping moon-dirt and obviously so much safer as compared to human efforts and, since we're talking of accomplishing this as a one way robotic ticket to ride and there shouldn't hardly be any R&D required, as such robots are going to be damn fast at getting the job done, and without any need of their having banked bone marrow standing by. Seems rather gosh darn pathetically odd that there was never one usenet contribution or even a worthy sub-topic generated thought as to appreciating this perfectly nifty NYT published consideration, of which we can go back through decades before, only to uncover MOS sequestered information as to the lunar sodium atmosphere; Moon's thin atmosphere extends farther than thought http://groups.google.com/group/sci.a...201e82b060a176 FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES: Moon's thin atmosphere extends farther than thought (c) 1995 Copyright Nando.net (c) 1995 N.Y. Times News Service Now researchers at Boston University, who two years ago determined that the rarefied gas bubble surrounding the Moon extended 5,000 miles high, say new studies show that the lunar atmosphere reaches out twice as far. The astronomers, Dr. Michael Mendillo and Dr. Jeffrey Baumgardner of the Center for Space Physics at Boston University, said that during the eclipse the Moon was totally in Earth's shadow, blocking the bright moonlight that obscures observations of gases in the lunar atmosphere. Under these conditions, the astronomers were able to detect the faint glow of sodium gas, which serves as a marker for other gases in the lunar atmosphere. "We were surprised to find that this glow extended to over nine times the radius of the Moon, to a height of about 14,000 kilometers, or 9,000 miles above the Moon's surface," Mendillo said. The researchers say their observations have enabled them to rule out some theories on the origin of the lunar atmosphere. They believe that the most likely explanation is the evaporation of atoms from the lunar surface when it is struck by light particles called photons coming from sunlight. Sodium and other elements escape the surface through erosion caused by the bombardment of photons. The astronomers earlier ruled out a suggestion that the lunar atmosphere was formed by the constant bombardment of the surface by micrometeorites. If the micrometeorite theory was true, they said, the atmosphere would be evenly distributed instead of being irregular in shape, as their measurements indicate. Another theory holds that solar wind -- charged particles streaming from the Sun -- kicks up surface atoms as it lashes the lunar surface. But the researchers said this theory now appeared to be eliminated because Earth's magnetic field traps solar wind and shields the lunar surface during the full-moon phase, when their observations show the tenuous lunar atmosphere fully extended above the surface. - If the regular lunar atmosphere of any substance extends out as far as having been reported, then obviously doing the math of what was at the time of Nov. 1993 as having been detectable at 8r (14,000 km) off the lunar deck as representing perhaps as few as 100 atoms/cm3 worth of sodium, whereas that amount certainly represents quit a bit of what's compiled upon the deck (I'm merely suggesting 12.8e6/cm3 or 12.8e9/m3), especially since sodium is most certainly one of the lighter elements of available mass that's associated within the mostly basalt lunar surface that's having been continually giving birth to such sodium gas. Obviously from meteor impacts having contributed a great deal of further insult to injury were subsequently generating massive amounts of additional sodium atmosphere, thereby having co-generated other elements such as good old O2, of which the molecular speed of even hot O2 simply wouldn't have been so easily excavated away by the typical hot and nasty gauntlet of solar winds (100~300 km/s). Upon being under siege my a nasty gauntlet of micro and not so micro meteorites might easily suggest having multiplied the atmospheric population of sodium by as great as a billion fold, making the near surface sodium density worth 6.4e15 ~ 12.8e15 sodium atoms/m3 plus all of the other much heavier elements as equally having been released becoming near worthy of creating 0.028 bar. This image and information as to Leonids impacting the Moon imposes further notions as to what the intensity of such impacts created with respect to the visible aspects of sodium. According to at least one CCD expterise and of the narrow optical/band-pass spectrum filter utilized is suggesting that perhaps as few as 40 atoms/cm3 could be CCD detected at the far end of the sodium trail. http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast26oct_1.htm Without our having a surface deployed probe taking various direct measurements, as such we can't possibly begin to imagine what that surface environment situation would have looked and felt like up close and personal. Of course I've tried several times to suggest we need this sort of raw data and, lo and behold each and every time the mainstream status quo of need-to-know and otherwise sharing their usual taboo/nondisclosure flak was insurmountable. Thus all of the usenet from hell, the all-knowing BBC, FSA and whatever's associated with brown-nosing NASA is continually out to lunch. Besides the O2 that most certainly had to have been made available, there's also Argon, Xenon, possibly a touch of CO2 plus certainly other extremely heavy elements that wouldn't have been so easly be solar-wind extracted, including the likes of existing Rn-222(radon) that's around most of the time as having been naturally created by the available Ra-226(radium) and via secondary/recoil reactions as having been solar and cosmic contributed. Therefore, our moon is not nearly as devoid of an atmosphere as we'd thought. As for deploying the modern day micro probes of perhaps as little as one kg becomes quite doable, with somewhat larger deployments accomplished as each of these highly affordable efforts produces a better understanding of what other methods can be achieved within such a thin but otherwise available atmosphere that's actually fairly respectable considering the 1/6th gravity factor. According to Mike Williams; "The strength of the surface gravity (1.623 m/s/s) isn't the critical factor. What's more significant is the escape velocity (Moon 2.38km/s, Titan 2.65km/s)." "The heavier gas sticks around but the useful gas escapes. The various types of molecules settle down to having the same average kinetic energy, but that means that the lighter molecules move faster than the heavier ones. They move just as fast, in fact, as if the heavier molecules were not present." "There's a piece of JavaScript on this page http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/kinetic/kintem.html#c4 that will calculate the average molecular speed given the molecular mass and temperature. N2 molecules (m=28) on Titan (T=-197C) average 260m/s which is about a tenth of the escape velocity. CO2 molecules (m=28) on the Moon (daytime T=107C) average 464m/s which is about a fifth of the escape velocity. That might sound OK, but not all molecules travel at the average velocity, some travel faster and leak away. The Earth isn't able to hold on to hydrogen molecules, and they average about a fifth of Earth's escape velocity." "Radon atoms would travel at an average of 206m/s on the Moon, which suggests that you could build an atmosphere of pure Radon." Of course, for building and sustaining that sort of a radon atmosphere, as for that to happen the moon requires having a good amount of background cash of radioactive elements including Radium(Ra-226) as for generating the Rn-222 gas, although a good amount of raw solar influx and thus secondary/recoil reactions might otherwise accomplish this same task, that plus the matter of accepted fact that our moon has been identified as being considerably more radioactive than Earth shouldn't have gone to waste. Fortunately for us humans, the notions of terraforming our moon into being livable (at least within seems doable), radium (Ra-226) half life is only good for 1600 years and thus the radon as having been generated shouldn't be around forever. In fact, if our icy proto-moon wasn't so gosh darn newish, as such most of the radioactive raw elements simply would have become spent and thus faded away by now, that is for other than whatever's continually solar and cosmic contributed and supposedly responsible for creating the amounts of sequestered He3, of which someone eventually needs to go there and process for obtaining that nifty substance before Earth runs itself entirely out of fossil/geological based energy and we manage to turn our Earth into another Mars. ~ Life upon Venus, a township w/Bridge & ET/UFO Park-n-Ride Tarmac: http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-town.htm The Russian/China LSE-CM/ISS (Lunar Space Elevator) http://guthvenus.tripod.com/lunar-space-elevator.htm Venus ETs, plus the updated sub-topics; Brad Guth / GASA-IEIS http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-topics.htm War is war, thus "in war there are no rules" - In fact, war has been the very reason of having to deal with the likes of others that haven't been playing by whatever rules, such as GW Bush. |
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B1ackwater wrote:
(CNN) -- NASA Administrator Michael Griffin rolled out NASA's plan for the future Monday, including new details about the spaceship intended to replace the shuttle and a timeline for returning astronauts to the moon in 2018. The design for the new crew exploration vehicle (CEV) looks a lot like the Apollo-era spaceship that first took NASA to the moon a generation ago. It is a similarity that is not lost on Griffin. "Think of it as Apollo on steroids," he told reporters at NASA headquarters in Washington. Under the new NASA plan, a "moon shot" would actually require two launches, both using rockets derived from shuttle launch hardware. One unmanned, heavy-lift rocket would transport a lunar lander plus supplies and other equipment to low-Earth orbit. Afterward, a second rocket would carry a crew capsule capable of transporting up to six astronauts into a similar orbit. The two would dock with each other, and then head to the moon. The first few missions are planned to put four astronauts on the surface of the moon for a week, while the unoccupied mothership orbits overhead. . . . . . OK - the question is "WHY ?". A few people for a few days at a time ... it's just not worth doing (except to enrich certain aerospace companies). While doing the 'final frontier' thing is appealing, there just HAS to be a little cost/benifit thinking done first. Describing this particular endeavour as "Apollo on steroids" is quite apt - because it doesn't seem to accomplish much beyond what Apollo accomplished, just a little more of it for a lot more money. IMHO, we should not return people to the moon until they're in a position to STAY there, with plenty of company. This means a whole different sort of program - with the first phases being entirely robotic. First of all, a supply of water MUST be found and exploited. Secondly, habitats and equipment for a growing colony MUST be in place. Only then should people start arriving. Robots can explore, robots can drill and mine, robots can construct habitats from imported and natural materials, robots can assemble equipment - and do it cheaply, safely and well. Any moon colony should be set up from the get-go to be perpetually self-sustaining ... because financing it from earth would be a perpetual and heavy drain on cash and resources. The moon is especially suited for using robots. Not only is the gravity light and the solar-power potential high but it's less than two light-seconds from earth. This means that telepresence robots - with human operators or guiders on earth - can be usefully employed. This will take up the slack until the electronic intelligence folks come up with some decent autonomous designs. Robo-Ants - swarm IQ - may be very useful for exploring, exploiting and building certain kinds of habitats. Smarter bots will be necessary to run/maintain certain kinds of equipment. Field-usable designs seem to still be ten or twenty years away. We've got the computing power now, but aren't sure what to do with it. 'Smart' is more than gigaFLOPS, it's doing the right things in the right order, 'mind' -vs- 'mess'. Lessons and techniques learned from moon-bots can then be applied to the NEXT big step - mars. In any event, it never hurts to put our eggs in more than one planetary basket, but the next step is to MAKE the damned basket rather than just shuttle veritible tourists to the moon and back and watch them do pretty much exactly what their predecessors did before. The 'next step' isn't one of volume, doing more of the same old crap, but a whole different paradigm - colonization. THAT will be worth the money and effort. I agree with you 100%, we shouldn't go to the moon just to do it again, it should be to stay and establish a permanent base. Robotics simply make sense to do the basic set up work, lots of digging in, because you wouldn't need to build structures on the moon, simply dig in and carve your space out, because meteors still strike the surface of the moon, and they aren't slowed by atmosphere. Dig in, seal the walls, floor, and ceiling, then pressurize. Use as many square miles of photovoltaic cells as required to power the place, raw sunlight being chock full of power. Hell, if you pressurized the central chamber high enough, You could literally strap on wings and fly in the thick air, weighing only 1/6 of what you weigh on earth. A true human powered flight. |
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On Thu, 22 Sep 2005 23:25:38 -0400, "J.J."
wrote: I agree with you 100%, we shouldn't go to the moon just to do it again, it should be to stay and establish a permanent base. Robotics simply make sense to do the basic set up work, lots of digging in, because you wouldn't need to build structures on the moon, simply dig in and carve your space out, because meteors still strike the surface of the moon, and they aren't slowed by atmosphere. Dig in, seal the walls, floor, and ceiling, then pressurize. Use as many square miles of photovoltaic cells as required to power the place, raw sunlight being chock full of power. NASA's current plan is not such a bad start for going down this grander colonization route. Their main issue is to try and minimise their launch costs. Having a small base on the Moon is an idea to begin with, when someone will need to service your remote controlled heavy construction and mining equipment when it breaks down. Also I just cannot see that digging long tunnels and open caverns into the ground can be done efficiently using remote controlled robots. It may be possible, but such projects on Earth usually need quite a lot of human assistance. In this respect it would be better to have your bouncy castle equipment servicing mini-base first. Your quite small underground and pressurized base second. Then to use your first wave of colony people to enlarge the area that they are already living in. And this enlarging base would need to be made fully self-supporting, with home grown water, oxygen, food, power, etc. Then once they are homed up you can see about large scale refining and construction. They would still need a few things from Earth, like in the case of electronics. This should mostly be small scale items though. I am not sure how much of your air would leak out through the rock above you, but I am sure that there would be methods to counteract this. Digging down deeper would be one method. This would seem like a better objective than ISS on the Moon. About two people rotated each six months. And they learn to do a few things on the smaller scale. Growing their own food not being one of them. I would also doubt doing their own oxygen production either. Not exactly living off the land in other words. Cardman. |
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