Has it been considered that long term, low gravity induced problems could be addressed with punctuated high gravity using a small on-board centrifuge? It may be discovered that being subjected to very high G's for a short time every 24 hours may counter the effects of long-term exposure to micro gravity.
Why not just let them sleep in a 1g environment? Being fairly still and level they shouldn't suffer quite as many side effects from the rotation.
Quote from: Slarty1080 on 08/29/2018 07:34 pmWhy not just let them sleep in a 1g environment? Being fairly still and level they shouldn't suffer quite as many side effects from the rotation.What would this be good for? Lying in bed on earth is used as a reasonable emulation of microgravity for medical tests. Gravity needs to be used for exercise. Plus toilet facilities would profit a lot from it.
Has it been considered that long term, low gravity induced problems could be addressed with punctuated high gravity using a small on-board centrifuge?...
Immune System Changes During Space Travel Could Affect Aging on Earthhttps://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Immune_System_Changes_During_Space_Travel_Could_Affect_Aging_on_Earth_999.html
Quote from: JulesVerneATV on 06/16/2024 08:28 pmImmune System Changes During Space Travel Could Affect Aging on Earthhttps://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Immune_System_Changes_During_Space_Travel_Could_Affect_Aging_on_Earth_999.htmlI don't see how they controlled for lack of immune system stimulation.
I have a different idea. Just go to Mars and see what happens. Make expensive plans when they are needed.
Had this capability been developed 10 or 20 years ago, as Gary Hudson intended, it would have been quite useful. You’re correct—now, the intermediate data points on the g curve will come from surface stays on the Moon and Mars. Even if someone started a well-funded centrifuge program today, it’d be obsolete before its launch.
The reason I don't like the punctuated gravity idea is that it presumes that biomedical problems are the only ones we're solving with spin G.Constant (or near-constant) spin G of some sort will save money by removing the necessity to redesign for microgravity, every machine or process which deals with any kind of fluid. The initial upfront investment is dwarfed by the ongoing development costs of not doing it. Plus, non-medical human factors issues are going to be the long pole in getting the general public to actually *want* to settle space.
Quote from: mikelepage on 06/21/2024 03:13 amConstant (or near-constant) spin G of some sort will save money by removing the necessity to redesign for microgravity, every machine or process which deals with any kind of fluid.The caveat there is that the rotation or spin system then becomes a critical system element. If the structure has to be spun down or rotation stopped, then those acceleration-dependant systems either need a microgravity-operation fallback mode (that incurs the costs you are trying to avoid), or a redundant microgravity backup system to be carried anyway.
Constant (or near-constant) spin G of some sort will save money by removing the necessity to redesign for microgravity, every machine or process which deals with any kind of fluid.