Recommended Posts

9 hours ago, Beittil said:

Curious tweet from Blair today...

 

 

 

"extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof", and this is the problem with social media.

 

Flat Earth people

Hollow Earth people

Moon Landing hoaxers

ISS is filmed on an aircraft, people

 

If this claim is not backed up with a peer reviewed paper, I'll add this to the list.

 

Very disappointed with this tweet. She should be thinking of "adding value" to the family business.

 

  • 3 weeks later...

 

 

 

Here is a larger image...catwalks for ground display....

SJgmn8q.jpg

Olympus display model                Bigelow Aerospace

 

Bigelow poster....

psc0416_wl_040_0.jpg

Diego Patino

 

 

CAN BILLIONAIRE ROBERT BIGELOW CREATE A LIFE FOR HUMANS IN SPACE?

 

large article, but here are a few excepts...

 

Quote

For two years, the astronauts aboard the ISS will try to determine if the BEAM, or some larger version of it, could be habitable over the long term. They will determine leak rate, measure radiation, and examine the thermal control inside the empty module. They’ll see how the module’s soft walls stand up to the bumps and bruises in space. And they’ll do their best to figure out just what an expandable structure orbiting Earth at about 5 miles per second feels like— an impossible thing to know until it is up there.

 

Quote

What’s not on display today is Bigelow’s follow-up to BEAM, the B330, a fully livable habitat that is well underway. According to Zamka, the craft is designed to fit a crew of six comfortably, has walls about 18 inches thick, layers of insulation, and protection from micrometeorites. It boasts solar and thermal radiator arrays, semiprivate berths, a zero-G toilet, four windows, two sets of control thrusters, and will be able to link up with other spacecraft for docking, towing, or tugging. Bigelow engineers are working on avionics systems for orbit, docking, maneuvering, and boosting beyond LEO into cislunar space. This past May, the company announced it was looking to fill upwards of 100 new positions to build those systems out for a (very optimistic) launch date in 2018.

 

Quote

B330 is much more complex than BEAM. It’s not a demonstration pod but a full-fledged expandable spacecraft, capable of sustaining human life on its own. Many of its life-support and comfort systems will be forerunners for a lunar base.
Zamka told me many of B330’s most daunting problems have been solved, not solely by Bigelow but with help from NASA. What might still hold up the launch, he said, would be finding a crew, and a rocket capable of carrying it. At about 43,000 pounds, B330 weighs roughly twice what the Russians or SpaceX can lift. That problem might be temporary, though. Two heavy-lift rockets are coming online shortly: SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy, due to launch later this year, and NASA’s SLS (for Space Launch System), which will debut within the decade.

much more at the link... ( though most is a recap)

http://www.popsci.com/can-billionaire-robert-bigelow-create-a-life-for-humans-in-space

  • Like 2
7 minutes ago, Unobscured Vision said:

;) Yep. Stuff we already knew. All we were missing were details.

 

And the view inside .. very nice. Thanks DD. :yes: 

It will be nice to see the Beam launch and the installation/expansion...can't wait....:D

  • Like 1
9 minutes ago, DocM said:

Well over 2x  the habitable volume of ISS in one module.

And that's before they do anything creative like adding smaller specialized modules for specific needs (like Science, Environmental, Reprocessing/Recycling, etc). Lots and lots of potential uses for Bigelow's stuff and they are purpose agnostic for the most part. Only design parameters that really need to be taken into account is whether they're going to be used for Orbital, Colony-No Atmosphere, or Colony-With Atmosphere. :yes: They'll be able to be used anywhere we go; and since they pack up into nice, tight payloads until deployed they're really the only practical way to go.

  • Like 1
  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

This Space Age 2.0, aka New Space, is really something - reusable rockets, electric rocket engines for use in space, megnetodynamic shields, expandable habitats, 3D printed hardware (even printed in space), all manner of cool stuff. So much fun :)

 

 

  • Like 3
28 minutes ago, DocM said:

This Space Age 2.0, aka New Space, is really something - reusable rockets, electric rocket engines for use in space, megnetodynamic shields, expandable habitats, 3D printed hardware (even printed in space), all manner of cool stuff. So much fun :)

 

If only NASA had kept up their early momentum from the Apollo days... We'd have been on Mars 20 years ago!

  • Like 2

Apollo was unsustainable due to the costs of Saturn V and it's operations, then politicians chose the worst of all possible successors with the Space Shuttle. Cool yes - but expensive to build and refurbish, limited to going in circles and unsafe from the first flight. Then, when alternatives presented themselves the Shuttle Mafia (those who profited from it) shut them down politically.  

 

HL-20 (now Dream Chaser) and HL-42 (DC's bigger brother) could have fulfilled the human and light cargo shuttle role, big dumb rockets the large cargo role and exploration can be done much better than Apollo or the current Apollo on Steroids™ (SLS/Orion).

 

 

Edited by DocM
  • Like 3
11 hours ago, DocM said:

Apollo was unsustainable due to the costs of Saturn V and it's operations, then politicians chose the worst of all possible successors with the Space Shuttle. Cool yes - but expensive to build and refurbish, limited to going in circles and unsafe from the first flight. Then, when alternatives presented themselves the Shuttle Mafia (those who profited from it) shut them down politically.  

 

HL-20 (now Dream Chaser) and HL-42 (DC's bigger brother) could have fulfilled the human and light cargo shuttle role, big dumb rockets the large cargo role and exploration can be done much better than Apollo or the current Apollo on Steroids™ (SLS/Orion).

 

 

I didn't mean the tech, I meant the whole momentum of space development. After Apollo 13, things seemed to stumble, falter, and fall on their face... Before then, everything was going at a breakneck pace.

  • Like 2
42 minutes ago, FloatingFatMan said:

Will they be actively using the BEAM module, or just pressurizing it and checking for leaks from time to time?

 

Once in place, the module will only be visited a few times a year for sensor data. This will be for 2 years and the module will be de-orbited.

 

ISS article on BEAM, 12 April, 2016

Article on BEAM

 

:)

 

Correct, this is a qualification test to see how it holds up - taking it from TRL-9 to TRL-10 (space worthy.)

 

Once qialified it can be used for long mission habitation, as spacecraft mission modules, as space station modules, and even for use as base or colony habitats. Nothing limits the tech to a sausage shape. It could be a torus used as a long mission gravity centrifuge, a dome, whatever.

Edited by DocM
  • Like 2
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • As long as i get to play GTA 6 before it ends 😂😂
    • Google is opening the world's first AI museum in Los Angeles by Ivan Jenic Image via: Google Ever since AI image generators went mainstream, the debate over whether AI-generated art is real art hasn't let up. Those who don’t consider AI to be art say that if a machine does the creating and anyone can prompt it, there’s no skill involved, and therefore no art is produced. The counter-argument is equally persistent, as defenders of AI-generated artworks often claim that AI is just a tool, and that every major technological breakthrough, like the camera or the computer, was met with the same skepticism before eventually being accepted as a legitimate creative medium. Google’s position in this debate is clear. Which is no surprise, as the company is investing billions in AI infrastructure. And now, in efforts to encourage people to use its AI even more, Google is opening Dataland on June 20, which it's calling the world's first AI arts museum. Located inside The Grand LA, a Frank Gehry-designed building in Los Angeles, the museum spans 25,000 square feet. The museum is built around a collaboration with media artist Refik Anadol, who has worked with Google since 2016. The inaugural exhibition is called Machine Dreams: Rainforest, and is powered by an AI model trained on “an extensive dataset of the natural world.” It generates 1.2 billion pixels of visuals in real time and reacts to visitors dynamically. The space also generates soundscapes, real-time emotion sensing, and algorithmically produced scents. Image via: Refik Anadol Studio / Google Google says that the museum is powered by its Gemini models, which run on Google Cloud. So, everything is generated inside one of Google’s AI data centers and is streamed to the museum. Alongside the museum opening, Google Arts & Culture is funding an AI Artist Residency, giving four artists $25,000 grants each, along with mentorship from Refik Anadol Studio and access to Google's machine learning tools. Their work will be shown at Dataland and on the Google Arts & Culture website later this year. Google’s AI museum will undoubtedly initiate a fired-up debate on social media, and we can’t wait to see the first reactions. Via: Smithsonian Magazine
    • Calling GTA 6 overhyped crap doesn’t make you edgy, it just makes you sound like someone who hasn’t enjoyed anything since the PS2 era.
    • I’m not arguing whether Rockstar likes money. Obviously, they do, they’re a business. I’m saying this isn’t new. They’ve always launched console first. This is just how Rockstar operates.
    • I'm not sure how old the school is, but they've been doing this since GTA 3. Back in those days we'd be lucky for game companies to release on the PC at all. And with the current state of Sony (or Microsoft) their gaming wing won't be getting a penny from me.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      570
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      175
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      73
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      68
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!