Recommended Posts

It starts with Space Complex Alpha in 2014-2015 and moves on to other missions. These were presented at a recent space conference and the Deputy NASA Administrator was very, very interested in how these would affect exploration logistics.

Yes, they're very serious. Mr. Bigelow is a multi-billionaire with a mission, and he's building a 180,000 sq/ft factory to crank out these modules in Las Vegas with plans for another near KSC.

(excuse the wrinkles & shine - photos under bright exhibit hall lights)

SC Bravo (to be followed by other SC's

Photo%20Feb%2028%2C%208%2037%2017%20PM.jpg

Resupply Depot Hercules (space dock)

Photo%20Feb%2028%2C%208%2036%2049%20PM.jpg

Deep Space Complex (planetary orbit to support landing sorties)

Photo%20Feb%2028%2C%208%2036%2010%20PM.jpg

Advanced Medical Facility (triage/treatment/Earth transport as space population increases)

Photo%20Feb%2028%2C%208%2035%2032%20PM.jpg

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/979120-bigelow-aerospace-long-term/
Share on other sites

This one is a special case. Bigelow has patented a means of assembling modules and several modified propulsion buses into a land-able base, to assembled at EML-1 (Earth/Moon Lagrange point) which could put down, do whatever, then because the buses are re-fuelable they could potentially re-locate the base.

What looks like yak's hair on the habs are Kevlar/Vectran tubes filled with lunar regolith (soil) and draped over the habs as enhanced radiation and meteor shielding. The means for generating and positiong these is also a Bigelow patent.

The propulsion buses also incorporate the landing gear, air locks, berthing ports and folding stairs. Extra thruster fuel is generated by electrolyzing waste water & excess humidity.

Photo%20Feb%2028%2C%2010%2006%2045%20PM.jpg

WOW is all i can say amid jizzing my pants and spasming like a lunatic. sign me up for one of them Hercules babies. you basically had me at "regolith". any mention of regolith and i'm smitten. all of these look awesome, thanks much for posting. but a question - are these space stations or ships? they look like they could fly off to Mars on their own, and one of the posters does imply that.

as for Bigelow - nice and well, but is he a wholly-owned subsidiary of Haden Industries? hey Doc...wanna go for a ride?

Most of their designs are bases/space stations but a few use modules as spacecraft habs. The Deep Space Complex would be a mix - transportation there and back, but once there serving as an orbital base launching sorties to Mars and its moons. They also have designs for lunar and asteroid missions, and NASA's NAUTILUS-X interplanetary ship concept uses them as habs, and uses their basic tech for its toroidal artificial gravity centrifuge.

They're adaptable to either role, and the habs can themselves fly free, allowing them to be replaced or serve as lifeboats because each has independent solar power, stores, galley, bathroom, radiation shelter, propulsion and the ability to make thruster fuel from waste water.

Bigelow Aerospace is a privately held company owned by Robert T. Bigelow and is headquartered in Las Vegas. He made his billions as the owner of Budget Suites of America. He's committed $500M to developing the tech since 1998 and has spent less than half, including a full mission control center (operational), 2 orbiting Genesis prototypes, that big new factory, contracts with Aerojet & others for propulsion module components (in delivery), guidance and life support (in long term human trials now) and joint projects with Lockheed-Martin, Boeing and SpaceX.

Mr. Big budgets his money wisely.

yes, Doc is a veritable fountain of info.

but Doc, what do these do for gravity? just occurred to me looking at the pics, doesn't look like they plan on generating any gravity.

maybe they are round so that they can constantly spin to create centrifugal gravity? good for the muscles and bones of people living there for long periods, but not sure what effect it would have on their mental state...

i always think about that...let's say you're on a shuttle going up to dock with a ship headed to Mars, and that ship has one of those torus things that keeps spinning around for gravity...do you get really dizzy as soon as you step on board? i know it sounds like a dumb question, but i don't think we have a lot of experience to go on beyond the vomit comet etc...

Just spinning the hab presents too many issues. A better way is a dedicated structure like NASA's NAUTILUS-X exploration ship would have. That proposai would use the expandable tech in its gravity centrifuge, as well as for its habitats.

They propose testing this at ISS first. Only a very few hours a day of just .13 G is enough to stem the ill effects of microgravity on the crew. Very Discovery-like in its approach, right down to the 10-11 meter diameter of the centrifuge.

Nautilus-class ships would be built in orbit in a modular manner, which would allow the propulsion modules to be swapped out according to the mission; chemical for lunar/near asteroids, plasma drives like VASIMR for Mars.

Once built the logical way to use them would be to station them at a space dock (see earlier post) at EML-1, which would allow low-energy transfer to most anywhere. Just fly the crew direct to the space dock when she's ready.

ISS test

3-nasasnautilu.jpg

Near-Earth version (lunar, near Earth asteroids etc)

nautilus%2Dx800.jpg

Deep space version (Mars etc)

oo.nautilus.ede.jpg

now the extended duration version is more like it...starting to look like a proper ship. i'd like to see more shielding to put me at ease, too many sci-fi books and movies as a kid always telling me the evil space rocks are out to get us just as we're about to enter Mars orbit...but i guess shielding will have to wait until we have better materials technology and stronger, safer engines. so the Nautilus take care of gravity, sort off....but what about the Bigelows? still don't see anything that might be able to generate G, unless you mean they will attach the Nautilus centrifuge to those.

the problem with centrifuges like that is the force the add to the structure they're attached to in weightlessness to.

for a spaceship you will also need to constantly spin the ship in the other direction. unless you have two of them spinning different directions, but then the ship twists. so then you need 3, 2 smaller ones and one bigger one, space small, big small, and the small ones rotating one way and the big one the other. then you shouldn't twist the ship. Still probably will do funny stuff but should be far more manageable.

for space stations it would be even more different since they should be mostly stationary. and you need to consider the metal fatigue it puts on the rest of the structure to.

Radiation shielding with Bigelow tech is much better than with ISS or spacecraft up to now. They're walls are 16+ inches thick and made of polymers, which are hydrogen rich making them excellent rad shields, and have the option of incorporating water stores in their walls enhancing shielding even more.

Counter-torque can be added by using two counter-rotating tori or torque can be managed by isolating the rotating mass using magnetic bearings, and powering rotation using thrusters on its rim (extra points for ion or plasma) etc. instead of using a motor attached to both the rotating and stationary structures.

Centrifugal simulation depends on the centrifuge radius and RPM's, kind of like the carnival ride or a training centrifuge. You don't really need a full 1G - .13G is enough and is easily acheved.

Physiologically there is little difference between real gravty and simulated, so it negates virtually all the bad effects of long term microgravity; slowed healing, muscle wasting, bone loss, stem cell changes, most fluid shifting, etc.

The main physiological downside is a gravity gradient which is more pronounced with a smaller centrifuge radius - "gravity" is stronger at your feet tha your head. It can be somewhat gotten used to, but some find it disorienting at first. So far it appears 10 meters is the minimum diameter to minimize this, so Arthur C. Clarke was close when he designed Discovery.

thanks again for the info. i think they'd likely have stronger ariticial gravity than that for the people coming back from long stays on Mars, asteroids and elsewhere so they could get re-acclimated to Eath g. this is all very exciting stuff, i just wish it'd become reality sooner....this global procrastination is really getting to me the older i become. i feel so sad that folks like Carl Sagan and Arthur C. Clarke aren't around anymore. it's a shame they never had the opportunity to witness their life's work materializing, even as a start.

I found this on the nasa website basically shows testing of inflatable habitat technology and plans to implement it on the ISS. Bigelow as of February is in talks with nasa to use their modules and test em on the space station. So this is all early design and a lot more information about what makes up each module. Great pictures Doc im really interested in this stuff i see huge implications if bigelow can pull it off. My link

  • 3 weeks later...

UPDATE: NATILUS-X

NASA's TAAT (Technology Applications Assessment Team) has generated a video of how NAUTILUS-X would look with the centrifuge running. Note the counter-rotating mass just ahead of the centrifuge. It also appears that the centrifuge would use ferrofluid seals.

Video - needs Blue Danube playing in the background ;)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zJ__F7ktvo

Some updated info - PowerPoint....

Excerpts -

- Long-duration space journey vehicle for crew of 6 for periods of 1 -24 months

- CIS-lunar would be initial Operations Zone [shakedown phase]

- Exo-atmospheric, Space-only vehicle

- Integrated Centrifuge for Crew Health

- Life Support in deployed Large Volume with shirt-sleeve servicing

- Truss & Stringer thrust-load distribution concept (non-orthogird)

- Capable of utilizing variety of Mission-Specific

- Propulsion Units [integrated in LEO, semi-autonomously

- Utilizes Inflatable & Deployed structures

- Incorporates Industrial Airlock for construction/maintenance

- Integrated RMS

- Supports Crewed Celestial-body Descent/Return Exploration vehicle(s)

- Utilizes Orion/Commercial vehicles for crew rotation & Earth return from LEO

thanks for posting Doc, i could watch that in replay all day, it's sweet. still not the big Discovery II-class ship i'd like us to build, but if this cheaper design is what gets us deeper into space this decade then go for it. can we still hope for a Mars landing before 2020, do you think?

No funding, private or public, for a pre-2025 Mars mission unless the economies and attitudes change drastically. If they were to change tomorrow, yes. NAUTILUS-X is entirely do-able in a shorter timeframe. It could be built for a few billion $ using conventional boosters like Atlas V. Delta IVand Falcon 9 for most of it and Falcon Heavy for the heavy stuff (>30 metric tons a pop.)

that gives us hope. thanks as always for the very clear explanation. i do sense some change in moods, but it could just be wishful thinking. wouldn't it be grand, though? a mission to Mars in this decade...i'll take the Nautilus if that's what's needed...you know i'm not a huge fan of that design.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Citizen Sleeper and Robobeat are free to claim on the Epic Games Store by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe PC gamers have two more games they can add to their library without needing to open their wallets, as the Epic Games Store's freebie offer has just refreshed. That means last week's Warhammer 40K Speed Freeks and The Ouroboros King offer has been replaced by two new games, which happen to be Robobeat and Citizen Sleeper copies. From the duo, Robobeat lands from developer Simon Fredholm, offering a rhythm-based action game. Released only last year, the title puts you into the shoes of Ace, a bounty hunter that's targeting the robot showman Frazzer. The fast-paced title offers movement techniques like wall-running, sliding, and bunny hopping to zoom around while shooting enemies, but the requirement is doing everything to the beat. Outside of built-in tracks, the title also lets players upload their own music to populate its levels too. Next, Citizen Sleeper lands from Jump Over The Age, a sci-fi RPG adventure taking place in a ruined space station where thousands of people are trying to survive. The tabletop RPG-inspired title uses things like dice and clocks to change how the player approaches situations and survives their day-to-day lives. There is a large range of characters to meet with in the station, each with their own storylines and alliances. "You are a sleeper, a digitised human consciousness in an artificial body, owned by a corporation that wants you back," says the developer about the setting. "Thrust amongst the unfamiliar and colourful inhabitants of the Eye, you need to build friendships, earn your keep, and navigate the factions of this strange metropolis, if you hope to survive to see the next cycle." The Citizen Sleeper and Robobeat giveaways are set to run until June 25 on the Epic Games Store, giving PC gamers seven days to claim the latest offer. Once this closes out, new freebies will take its place on the same day. They are supposed to be copies of RollerCoaster Tycoon 3 and Voidwrought. Don't forget that mobile gamers can check out the Epic Game Store's weekly giveaways on Android and iOS to grab a freebie there as well.
    • Vivaldi version 8.0.4033.50 released June 17: https://vivaldi.com/blog/desktop/minor-update-eight-8-0/
    • The Online part hasn't even been announced and probably won't be included on day one. This is a massive singleplayer game.
    • While I agree with all that, it just proves there's an a** built for every seat.
  • Recent Achievements

    • 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
    • Week One Done
      Harris Gilbert earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      562
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      169
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      72
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      64
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!