On Orbital Fuel Stations
dylanduck writes "Being able to fill up your spacecraft from a fuel depot in orbit round the Earth or Moon is key to the long-term prospects of astronauts exploring the solar system, according to NASA engineers. Trouble is NASA doesn't want to build it themselves. So there's $5 million for any enterprising groups who can develop a simple version themselves."
Obviously you need atoms up there, which have to come from somewhere, but splitting them into fuel is easy, you're floating in space with all this sunlight. The problem is that if you carry a kilo of water from the surface and then swap it for a kilo of hydrogen/oxygen when you get to space, the benefits are minimal (easier storage?). This would work well coupled with a captured icy asteroid, even a small one.
I am one of many. My idea is not unique, nor do I expect my voice alone to sway you. I speak in a chorus of opinion.
So sure, once you get liquid hydrogen from the moon / some other energy source it'd be usefull.. which pretty much means we need a moonbase first.
"" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
Space One proved that a competition with a good incentive can produce results faster than state sponsored research. I hope the trend will continue.
Has anyone else noticed that zero G is a constant PITA for nearly all space applications?
A short list includes:
Human health (bones, muscles, fluid accumulation etc)
Environment (air flow, hygeine)
Fluids in general (measuring, pumping)
Going to the toilet (or john)
And lots of others.
I have a question: Why aren't we putting some effort into artificial gravity? I mean centrifuge effects - not Star Trek. After all, we're expending all this effort into individual engineering solutions for each problem. If we had AG of some sort, wouldn't that remove the need for that?
Just my 2 pennies worth.