Artificial-Gravity Systems (TA06, TA07)Artificial Gravity spacecraft has been researched for years as an option for reducing the detrimental effects of long-duration 0-g on the human physiology. It would also benefit LEO and HEO commercial facilities. Artificial Gravity includes technologies and research of Artificial Gravity spacecraft for long-duration deep space missions.Examples of technologies required include Coriolis counter-effects technologies; deployable and retracting mechanism for A-G spin-up & down in zero-G; power and/or propulsion for spin-up/spin-down; tethers (momentum exchange); light weight high-strength tension cables; slip-rings for high efficient power transfer on rotating joints; counter rotating docking mechanism; and magnetic force suits (body suits that would experience a downward force due to localized magnetic field).
What happens if astronauts are kept in some kind of suspended animation? Would that also retard or suspend their skeleto-muscular atrophy?
The real problem is that we dont know the effects of spin gravity at all.Effects of prolonged micro-g are well quantified, we have no data on what spin G does to humans over a prolonged period. Trying it out for the first time on a martian sortie with no way to turn back would be a Bad Idea - maybe they will all co crazy from prolonged sea sickness or something.
Of course [AG] should be tested in cis-lunar space before committing to a Mars trip. It's just a great shame that almost nothing in this field has been tested in space in the last 40 years.
The real problem is that we dont know the effects of spin gravity at all.Effects of prolonged micro-g are well quantified, we have no data on what spin G does to humans over a prolonged period. Trying it out for the first time on a martian sortie with no way to turn back would be a Bad Idea - maybe they will all co crazy from prolonged sea sickness or something.Engineering related effects on mechanisms etc are much easier to test and quantify, but even that might have some hidden risks.
Of course it should be tested in cis-lunar space before committing to a Mars trip. It's just a great shame that almost nothing in this field has been tested in space in the last 40 years.
The only good reason why we should have 0g is that it makes design simpler, you can use aerobreaking and you save 5% weight.
I would like to see a roughly 900m dia, 1rpm ring station, which would generate one gee at the rim.
It would be started from two habs on a tether, so the spin gravity effects could be studied from the very beginning of construction.
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 11/13/2013 09:32 pmI would like to see a roughly 900m dia, 1rpm ring station, which would generate one gee at the rim.Long before that happens, I'd like to see an 893m tether with a hab on one or both ends, spinning at 1 rpm.
Those limitations are kind of the worst things about AG that I could find. Some people (big rocket guys mostly) don't like an idea of an assembled shield. I think that it would work just fine.The same with ekstra complications. 5% isn't that much of a deal either.`1 G should be default preference, but that goes against the whole "we must build 0 G laboratory in space, so that we can learn to live in 0 G, that's why we need $100B" idea..
You've got the "zero-g" lab part wrong though, it was and is mostly to learn what we can DO in microgravity rather than if we can "live" there for prolonged periods. We've already proven the former but are still looking for the former latter.
Quote from: sanman on 11/12/2013 04:44 amWhat happens if astronauts are kept in some kind of suspended animation? Would that also retard or suspend their skeleto-muscular atrophy?There is no such a thing at the present time.
Testing of artificial gravity on human subjects has been done. Human beings seem to put up with 1 rpm without problems, but 2 rpm was too much.
Even something like this seems far off at around 12-15m, could you imagine the BFR needed to launch it? Not to mention the speed at which it would have to spin...Doesn't seem worth it.....