Along with tanks, there are also:- The trust structure (compressive loads are not tensile loads)
- Header tanks (will be full to allow deorbit & EDL, hanging the tanks upside-down is not a design use-case)
- Propellant plumbing ullage (e.g. GCH4/GOX entry at the top as standard would ingest liquid when inverted)
- CLSS plumbing and ullage.
- Crew air circulation design
Designing any vehicle to operate both right-side-up and inverted is a challenge, and adding a requirement to operate in microgravity does not make that challenge easier. Fluids pool in the wrong place, gasses are at the wrong end of your traps, materials strain the wrong way and bind moving parts, etc. It is FAR from proven that inverted operation of a stock Starship is viable.
Let's go down the list, shall we?Quote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pmAlong with tanks, there are also:- The trust structure (compressive loads are not tensile loads)If the interstage / thrust structure were made of unreinforced concrete this might concern me. But it's made of steel, and it's designed to take compressive loads that are at least an order-of-magnitude greater than the proposed tensile loads (the thrust structure has to support the full thrust of the Raptor engines, and the interstage has to support the fully-fueled Starship under an in-flight acceleration of 3+ gs). These two beefy structures will laugh at such tiny tensile loads.For steel tension is easier than compression, because there's no concern for buckling. In general a steel I-beam (ie a profile that resists buckling) can take roughly the same loads in compression and tension.
Quote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pm- Propellant plumbing ullage (e.g. GCH4/GOX entry at the top as standard would ingest liquid when inverted)I sure hope they've got a valve for closing that, because it will be in microgravity. The valve might need a re-qual to confirm it works at those pressures, so for SpaceX that means "give it to an intern for a week."
Quote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pm- CLSS plumbing and ullage.This is a good point. In fact we don't even know if SpaceX is developing a Closed Life Support System that will operate in 1 g. Afaik they've shown little interest in anything but microgravity.But the more I think about it, the less problematic it gets. ISS heritage components are designed to be tested under 1 g (carbon dioxide removal, dehumidification), and the few exceptions (eg the urine processing assembly centrifuge) are relatively unimportant for high closure rates. The crew may simply store urine in a tank, and accept a slightly higher consumables mass for a give mission duration.
Quote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pm- Crew air circulation designAgain, not terribly hard. In microgravity you need large airflow speeds to ensure even mixing because there's no buoyancy, so you can get CO2 pockets. In case you haven't noticed, this isn't a problem in your house here on Earth under 1 g. For Mars/Moon gravity you just re-run the computer simulation assuming appropriate g-level.
No-one is claiming a stock Starship will be used (at the very least you need the furniture re-oriented). Just that the relatively minor work to remedy your concerns is far easier than1) designing a completely novel nose-to-nose docking system, and the long lever arm / tether-and-damper that would be needed to keep RPM reasonable, or worse2) designing an entire variable gravity test bed vehicle completely from scratch (which is what the thread started with).Swapping a valve or re-running a simulation doesn't sound so hard when the alternative is to design and build a space station from scratch!
I'm more keen to discuss the issues with [...] deploying/retracting solar panels in any spin-gravity scenario.
As I've said in previous posts, ideally from a design perspective, spin gravity should not be an *additional* cost to running the ship during cruise phase, rather, it should actually make many things *easier*.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 02/26/2020 01:54 pmLet's go down the list, shall we?Quote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pmAlong with tanks, there are also:- The trust structure (compressive loads are not tensile loads)If the interstage / thrust structure were made of unreinforced concrete this might concern me. But it's made of steel, and it's designed to take compressive loads that are at least an order-of-magnitude greater than the proposed tensile loads (the thrust structure has to support the full thrust of the Raptor engines, and the interstage has to support the fully-fueled Starship under an in-flight acceleration of 3+ gs). These two beefy structures will laugh at such tiny tensile loads.For steel tension is easier than compression, because there's no concern for buckling. In general a steel I-beam (ie a profile that resists buckling) can take roughly the same loads in compression and tension.Starship is not entirely in compression, so it cannot be assumed that inversion will just switch compression to [tension and] everything will be OK. Same goes for header tanks etc.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 02/26/2020 01:54 pmQuote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pm- Propellant plumbing ullage (e.g. GCH4/GOX entry at the top as standard would ingest liquid when inverted)I sure hope they've got a valve for closing that, because it will be in microgravity. The valve might need a re-qual to confirm it works at those pressures, so for SpaceX that means "give it to an intern for a week."It's more than just a valve, if you want your RCS to work properly (e.g. for spinup/spindown) you need an alternative gas ingest route, qualification for both routes that they will not ingest fluid, etc.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 02/26/2020 01:54 pmQuote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pm- CLSS plumbing and ullage.This is a good point. In fact we don't even know if SpaceX is developing a Closed Life Support System that will operate in 1 g. Afaik they've shown little interest in anything but microgravity.But the more I think about it, the less problematic it gets. ISS heritage components are designed to be tested under 1 g (carbon dioxide removal, dehumidification), and the few exceptions (eg the urine processing assembly centrifuge) are relatively unimportant for high closure rates. The crew may simply store urine in a tank, and accept a slightly higher consumables mass for a give mission duration.Qualifying plumbing for 1g plus microgravity has nothing to do with qualifying plumbing for -1g. Fluids do not conveniently reverse flow direction for you.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 02/26/2020 01:54 pmQuote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 12:19 pm- Crew air circulation designAgain, not terribly hard. In microgravity you need large airflow speeds to ensure even mixing because there's no buoyancy, so you can get CO2 pockets. In case you haven't noticed, this isn't a problem in your house here on Earth under 1 g. For Mars/Moon gravity you just re-run the computer simulation assuming appropriate g-level.A normal house leaks like a sieve. For houses and other buildings that do approximate a sealed container, you DO have to take into account internal airflow to prevent pockets forming, and directionality of gravity is vital even for forced airflow.
Quote from: Twark_Main on 02/26/2020 01:54 pmNo-one is claiming a stock Starship will be used (at the very least you need the furniture re-oriented). Just that the relatively minor work to remedy your concerns is far easier than1) designing a completely novel nose-to-nose docking system, and the long lever arm / tether-and-damper that would be needed to keep RPM reasonable, or worse2) designing an entire variable gravity test bed vehicle completely from scratch (which is what the thread started with).Swapping a valve or re-running a simulation doesn't sound so hard when the alternative is to design and build a space station from scratch!The work needed to make Starship operate inverted is much more than 'relatively minor', and much more than connecting to the existing lifting hardware in the existing design orientation and acceleration. Any appreciable rotation rate will require dealing with stabilising long tethers anyway, so saving a few metres at each end by flipping Starship causes more problems than it [solves].
if you want your RCS to work properly (e.g. for spinup/spindown) you need an alternative gas ingest route, qualification for both routes that they will not ingest fluid
- CLSS plumbing and ullage.- Crew air circulation design
It is FAR from proven that inverted operation of a stock Starship is viable.
Any appreciable rotation rate will require dealing with stabilising long tethers anyway
I guess I missed the story about people on Earth being asphyxiated in pockets of CO2 that formed around their heads... ?
Quote from: edzieba on 02/26/2020 03:30 pmAny appreciable rotation rate will require dealing with stabilising long tethers anywayIncorrect. Tail-tail AG can achieve 1g at the forward deck at less than 5RPM. Modern (ground-based) research says that pretty much everyone can adapt to 5RPM, provided you allow proper head movement during spin-up. (And testing the ECLSS at Mars-g requires less than 3RPM. Trivial.)(Older research gave weird and inconsistent results. But it was only in the last 20yrs that the importance of experiencing a full range of motion during adaptation was understood. Previously, people might have instinctively tried to limit head-movement, thinking that would help. Inconsistent experiment design would explain the wildly varying results of the early work, with some seeing nausea at just 2RPM, others at 4, others at 6.)
Can you post some links to that modern research on tolerance to rotation please? I'm not challenging you statements, I've been looking for that kind of information for awhile.
The researchers studied gene expression in white blood cells (leukocytes) in 14 astronauts who resided on the International Space Station (ISS) for between four-and-a-half and six-and-a-half months between 2015 and 2019. Blood samples were taken from each astronaut at 10 points: once pre-flight, four times during flight, and five times when they were back on Earth....The researchers observed that the first cluster of genes dialed down when the astronauts reached space and went back up when they were on Earth; the reverse was seen for the second cluster.
You'd need to find an animal analogue in order to do sensible research on limits (ie, the minimum gravity before the effect is reduced or eliminated), so that you can have sufficient group-sizes for meaningful statistics.
The problem with human zero-g research is that they aren't just test subjects. With the partial exception of the Kelly twins, there's no proper control groups, nor are astronauts selected at random. Astronauts are a really good example of a failure in the selection process from the POV of medical research. (Obviously, there's perfectly mundane reasons why that's not practical.)
In a baton station, like Vast's, that's going to be even worse. You can't realistically expect to confine astronauts to single g-levels throughout their stay. Again, they aren't going to be just test subjects, they are also the researchers, the maintenance crew, the techs for other research, and need to move throughout the station. You might give them accelerometers/etc to record "time spent at each g-level", but that's very messy data.
humans are likely the only animal that will be in sufficient numbers in space for the foreseeable future
Yeah, in general you need a large sample size for any human research studies, but the problem we need to address is pretty immediate. Well, immediate if we are actively trying to expand humanity out into space.
So we may have to deal with small sample sizes in the beginning and then keep medically testing everyone that goes into space that spends time in some form of artificial gravity.
Before anyone tries to build a rotating station large enough for human beings, it seems to me that it's critical to prove that such a thing can be stabilized.
...When you can show that a 1.12-meter ring can be adequately stabilized, then try an 11.2-meter one. You could fit a couple of people inside of that, if needed, although it'd still just be 1/10 of a gravity. When you've demonstrated that you can keep such a thing stable indefinitely, then it's reasonable to try to build a 100-meter diameter ring.
But until you're sure you've dealt with the stability problem, I think all the other issues are moot. Is anyone, anywhere, proposing this kind of experiment?