Jim - 19/2/2007 11:58 AMQuotesandrot - 19/2/2007 11:11 AMI quickly read the paper, there is the formula for calculating the centripetal acceleration given radius and angular rate. A 2m radius cylinder should spin at 12 rpm to have 1/3 g and 20 rpm to have almost 1 g... am I correct? Would it make sense to use the centrifuge as sleeping quarters for the astronauts?Too small, Corolis effect would effect the crew
sandrot - 19/2/2007 11:11 AMI quickly read the paper, there is the formula for calculating the centripetal acceleration given radius and angular rate. A 2m radius cylinder should spin at 12 rpm to have 1/3 g and 20 rpm to have almost 1 g... am I correct? Would it make sense to use the centrifuge as sleeping quarters for the astronauts?
khallow - 11/4/2007 11:11 AM I remember someone discussing a smallish centrifuge (say no more than a few meters in diameter that you could sleep in.
There is a NASA sponsored centrifuge down in Galveston, TX at UTMB that they have been using for long duration studies.
drbobguy - 10/4/2007 7:44 PMWhat most people usually forget is you *DON'T* need a large structure. All you need is a tether connecting two "pods"...
publiusr - 23/4/2007 7:28 PMQuotedrbobguy - 10/4/2007 7:44 PMWhat most people usually forget is you *DON'T* need a large structure. All you need is a tether connecting two "pods"...And pray the tether doesn't break? I'll take my HLLVs and a substantial structure.
publiusr - 23/4/2007 6:46 PMThey have an atmo to stop meteors--and with bad luck being what it is...with the bare foot being the one to find a tack, one meteor nip and there the tether goes.
cz77 - 24/4/2007 1:09 PMOn an engineering level, what is the minimum size, to eliminate as a human factor, the coriolis effect?