Mars Society Succeeds in Spinning Mice
!splut writes "Having recently finished with making humans live in the large, circular kitchen that is the Flashline Arctic Station , the forward thinking Mars Society has found a new organism to confuse. An experiment being conducted at Pioneer Astronautics for the Society is examining whether or not Coriolis effects will severely disorient mice in the Mars Society's upcoming Translife Mission , which will eventually place a colony of mice in low earth orbit in a small rotating satellite for 50 days. The current experiment involves placing a mouse habitat at the end of a turntable spinning at 25rpm, and has been going on 24-7 since August 30! Amazingly, the mice seem to be doing fine. Think they'll be able to walk straight when they stop the turntable?"
We used to do this with Pop's record player... The mice didn't like having to hop over the arm every revolution.
;->
fp
There have been speculative non-fiction books describing the construction of spinning space stations for years.
A major design constraint is that they try to keep the rotation rate as low as possible. Original designs used a rate of about 1 RPM, but later designs cited a requirement to push this to about 1/4 RPM for humans' long-term health.
I have no idea why such a low rate would be required. Neither does a doctor friend I queried.
Is there any physiological basis for needing a slow rotation rate for long-term habitation, or were these numbers pulled out of a hat by the profs designing the stations?
[My doctor friend says that as long as there isn't much of a "gravity" gradient between a person's head and feet, he couldn't thinnk of any difficulties offhand. I noted that the speed of the station's rotation should be much greater than the speed of blood moving through the body to avoid coriolis effect concerns, but the number he cited for blood velocity is low enough that this is a non-issue. Disclaimer: These were all off-the-cuff answers, and not official medical advice.]
So this is how the mice are planning to get off the planet before the Vogons get here with their yellow ships and the poetry
-- We don't understand software, and sometimes we don't understand hardware, but we can *see* the blinking lights
the minimum speed required to form a gravity well on a space station? any design constraints?
i'd love to see a space station design which incorporates (artificial) gravity, ala Ender's Game [Orson Scott Card]
Why is a mouse when it spins?
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
"The higher the fewer!!!"
possible explanation here...