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This is interesting.
https://skyandtelescope.org/astronomy-n … 032520166/
In the past, Pluto's atmospheric pressure may have been up to 28KPa. The temperature of Pluto is close to the nitrogen triple point. This means that a small increase in temperature results in a disproportionate increase in atmospheric pressure, as nitrogen sublimes.
If humans introduce atmospheric nanoparticles, the resultant global warming effect should be sufficient to trigger the sublimation of solid nitrogen on Pluto's surface. Once pressure is sufficiently high, areas of land can be made habitable by erecting tents filled with breathable air. The air within can be heated from ~70K to 250K, using nuclear waste heat. There is no difference in pressure between the inside and outside of the tent. But outside, the nitrogen atmosphere would be far colder and denser than the air within. So the tent must withstand bouyant forces. But these are fairly minimal. On the order of 50Pa. So a simple polyethylene sheet drapped over a thin metal frame, shouod be sufficient.
Whilst Pluto is unlikely to be turned into an analogue of Earth, it may turn out to be one of the easiest objects to make habitable for humans. It doesn't need a biosphere, just an atmosphere that we can built non-pressurised enclosures under. The same may be true of Triton, Eris and Titan.
Images from the Vasa Museum in Stockholm.
Assorted pics from Stockholm.
Pictures from Upsalla.
These images are from Gamla Stan (Old Town), Stockholm.
Image 1. This side street is exactly what I imagine Martian city streets to look like. Narrow, pedestrian, with overspill seating for bars and restaurants.
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Tonight is the last night of our holiday to Scandinavia. My wife and I have had a wonderful time. Over the next week, I will post as many pictures as I am able on this thread. Where applicable, I will also add comments relevant to Mars colonisation as well. Both holidays this year my wife and I have visited European cities. Here on Earth, cities tend to be built on rivers or coastal areas, as this allows easy transport of bulk freight into urban areas. Cities are also surrounded by farmland and countryside. People can live outside of the city in a suburb, for example, and commute into the city for work or culture. None of that will apply on Mars. Cities will be dense urban cores. There will be no countryside outside. These places will be lone oases of warmth, air and water, against a frozen, vacuum landscape, bathed in hard radiation.
My wife and I took the sleeper train from Stockholm to Narvik. We had two nights in Narvik. It is not the most artistically beautiful town, but the natural scenery was inspiring. We were very lucky with the weather. We are in Kiruna for one night now and will be getting the sleeper train back to Stockholm tomorrow night. I will put photos on the website when I get back to UK at the end of the week.
My wife and I are in Sweden for an 11 day summer holiday. This is the second time we have been to Sweden. We are starting with three days in Stockholm. Saturday night we board a sleeper train to Narvik. We get one day in Narvik and 2 days in Swedish Lapland, before flying back to Stockholm via Oslo.
Last time I was in Stockholm was 17 years ago. I wasn't impressed at the time. But looking at it again, I would say it is now one my favourite European cities. Swedish city architecture is grand, robust and imposing. Most buildings are constructed with thick stone walls. District heating is extensively used in Stockholm. This is advantageous because Sweden is poor in fossil fuel resources.
Recent discussions on terraforming have focused on the production of nanorods for warming Mars.
https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2025/06/m … suits.html
These are far more potent, mass for mass, than any greenhouse gas we have discovered to date. If Starship provides low cost launch capabilities to Earth orbit, then we can begin making nanorods on Earth and launching them to Mars. These rods do not need to soft land on Mars to be deployed. If the delivery vehicle can slow their approach to say 1km/s, they could be deployed by exploding the vehicle in the atmosphere or by allowing it to impact the surface.
If nanorods can be delivered high into the atmosphere, then their effective atmospheric lifetime will be increased. Any warming that they deliver will result in atmospheric pressure increase. This would reduce surface radiation levels and would make it easier for astronauts to spend substantial time exploring the surface.
Terraforming Mars within 40 years?
https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2025/06/m … suits.html
This seems ambitious to me. But advances in nanorods as global warming agents may bring it closer to reality.
Starship is 9m in diameter and 52m long.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX_Starship
So any enclosure needs at least those dimensions. A nubian vaulting technique may work best in this application. With Starship already pressure rated, a layer of regolith 1-2m thick would be needed for radiation shielding.
Void, insulation of some kind may be valuable. Even with several metres of regolith covering the dome, the temperature difference between the inner and outer surfaces could result in substantial heat loss. And power won't be cheap on Mars. A lot of energy will be needed just to establish a thermal gradient across the regolith berm.
It is building complexity and failure modes into applications that really don't need it. It presupposes that you have an electronic device with you, that it is charged and working, that software problems don't screw it up. In other words, it is a bad idea. Much better simply to write the menu up on the wall, or print it and stick it to the wall. If the menu can be conveyed using chalk written on a slab of stone, then that is the best solution. The resources involved are miniscule. The simplest solution is almost always the best. There is an aesthetic elegance to it as well.
I hadn't considered laser cutting of stone. But the answer appears to be yes.
https://baisonlaser.com/blog/laser-cut-stone/
Fibre lasers appear to give the best results for low porosity rock like basalt. Lasers can cut stone surfaces to precise shapes with very clean cuts. This would be advantageous, as it allows the finished stone elements to be glued together using extremely thin veneers of epoxy glue. This has much higher strength than any mortar we can make from soil. But it needs to be imported from Earth. If we can use layers as thin a 10 microns, then 100kg of epoxy would be enough to glue together a 60m diameter dome.
The precision allowed by laser cutting opens a lot of other applications as well. We could use stone composites to make a lot of things on Mars.
The concept examined in this post is the use of diamond cutting discs, imported from Earth, to shape Martian surface rocks into thin tiles or bricks. These are then bonded using a native grout or epoxy glue to form parabolic domes using a timbrel vaulting technique. The practicality of this idea depends upon the local abundance of suitably strong rocks. Regolith will need to be excavated and grade seperated to extract rocks of the right size. These would then be cut to shape using diamond saws.
The exact lifetime of a cutting disc is difficult to estimate, as it depends upon the hardness of the material being cut. This site gives an estimate of 10 months, based upon 20 hours per week of cutting. This amounts to an 800 hour life expectancy.
https://support.hisglassworks.com/hc/en … Disks-last
The amount of stone cut in this time, is again dependant on hardness. This article examines cutting rates for rocks of different hardness. Basalt has a hardness of 6-7 on the Mohs scale, which is comparable to granite. This document examines cutting rates and wear for a number of rocks, including many granites.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-54625-5.pdf
Cutting rates vary between 4.5-11.5m2/hr, with 8m2/hr being an approximate average. A single disc will therefore cut 6400m2 of stone surface over an average 800 hour operating life. I estimate that a single 300mm diameter disc will weigh 1.7kg, based upon this product and its specification.
https://www.toolstation.com/bosch-stone … 40807c63b0
Suppose we wanted to build a hemispherical dome some 30m in diameter. How much cutting would be needed? A strong timbrel domes could be built from three layers of tile or thinly sliced rock. The surface area of a 30m diameter hemispherical dome is 1414m2. All three layers would have 3x this surface area, or 4241m2. A single diamond cutting disc, weighing 1.7kg could therefore cut enough stone to build a 30m diameter timbrel dome. A 60m diameter dome would require some 4x as much cutting, or 16,965m2. We would need 2.65 cutting discs, weighing 4.5kg, to cut sufficient stone for this. Such a dome would provide some 56,549m3 of internal volume. This is over 50x the Starship payload volume.
The dome will have high compressive strength, but would be relatively weak in tension. To pressurise the dome, we must cover it with enough regolith such that external weight balances internal pressure. As regolith is graded to provide coarse rocks, the lighter fractions will be compacted into a berm around the dome, that rises as the dome is constructed. This provides a surface that robotic assemblers can use as a base as the dome is constructed.
The interior of the dome will be decked out and divided into compartments using a mixture of stone timbrel, adobe, rammed soil blocks and fine regolith mortar.
Are cities bad for mental health?
https://youtu.be/Rb6KlJbLW1M
Population density appears to correlate negatively with mental health. As a minimum, I think we can design our cities to be much better for living in. Carfree or low car environments allow streets to become more habitable spaces. In Holland, there was substantially less car traffic than in the UK. People tended to walk and bike a lot more. Cities are set up as pedestrian spaces because most of them are pre-industrial.
Bikes bring problems of their own. They are silent and it is easy not to see them coming when stepping out into a road. In Amsterdam, my wife and I came across a man who had been knocked down by a bike. He had a serious head injury.
The quality of architecture definitely helps as well. Artistically beautiful places are always better environments to be in. The UK is full of drab, mass produced and ugly buildings. Endless sprawling housing estates, that are neither urban nor rural. A seemingly endless nowhere that people dream of escaping from.
Cutting Starship upper stage into two parts strikes me as a good idea. It is proving difficult for SpaceX to develop a fully reusable Starship upper stage. The heat shield is likely to require extensive reservicing between missions even if they do get it to work. Increased staging inevitably increases complexity, but relaxes dry weight requirements. A 2.5 stage vehicle would involve a lower stage and a sub-orbital second stage, both of which are reusable. The upper stage would be expendible (or repurposable and canibalised in orbit). It would consist of a limited number of pressure fed engines, tankage and payload. Control and manoevring systems would be stripped out in orbit and returned to Earth for reuse. The pressure fed engines and fuselage would be raw materials upon reaching orbit. Stuff we use for building space stations or grinding up and using for reaction mass.
Void, congratulations on an interesting new topic! Your posts continue to inspire new thinking.
For Mars specifically, ice covered ponds would be good places to grow algae, yeast and cyanobacteria. These can be used as biomass feedstock for petrochemicals and even food ingredients. The greenhouse would not need to be pressurised. Evaporation will result in high humidity within the greenhouse, which should suppress further sublimation from the ice layer. So the greenhouse keeps water vapour in and prevents dust from contaminating the surface of the ice. It can be a relatively light structure, made from glass panes in a metal frame. It needs to stand up to wind liading during dust storms, but the dP in such a thin atmosphere should be modest. We could even floating the glass structure over the solid ice. That avoids the need for heavy supporting frames.
As an aside, Isaac Arthur has produced a terraforming compendium.
https://youtu.be/PRzfQofJZRk
I have watched about one third of his video so far. One thing that has occured to me in the past, is that human colonies established on icy outer solar system bodies will generate waste heat and will leak oxygen. Both effects will contribute to terraforming. Waste heat will raise temperatures, causing ice sublimation. Solar UV will dissociate water vapour into hydrogen and oxygen, with the former escaping and the latter remaining trapped. Terraforming is something that will happen slowly even if humans are not actively trying to do it. As human population rises, so does heat generation. This accelerates the whole process. So ultimately, large bodies will tend to accumulate thin oxyfen atmospheres. Eventually, pressure may increase to the point where the atmosphere is breathable.
Undersea pumped storage is under development in Germany.
https://youtu.be/essiSG3gED0
The only objection I have to this idea is that the pump and turbine must also be deep underwater or underground. Undersea CAES using a trompe would have a lower maintenance burden.
Interesting. We will be sending rockets to the moon, containing people and equipment. Those rockets will be reusable. If we can send valuable materials back to Earth, it will certainly subsidise the whole programme. The comets and asteroids that created the craters, may have delivered water, cabon and ammonia as well. I wonder if these materials are trapped under crater floors? Could we find water trapped in rock pores? If so, we won't need to trek to frozen polar craters to find the water we need.
It is a liquid core nuclear thermal rocket engine. Not really a new idea. The problem with it, in common with all NTR proposals is that fission products inevitably leak into the hydrogen exhaust. Most will be blown away by solar wind. But a small proportion will enter Earth atmosphere. Enough for the lefty green lobby to spit their dummies out.
A fission-fusion micro-pellet pulsepropulsion system would give much better performance. But the exhaust will be ionised, so fission products would be trapped in Earth's magnetic field. If we are serious about colonising space, we need to take that hit. Progress comes at a price. It isn't a big problem.
The blades and nacelle are now finished! I need to replace the steel bracing strip with polymer string, or fingers are likely to go missing. But I believe I can assemble the completed device tomorrow.
Void, that is interesting. One thing that surprised me (though probably should not) is the sheer size of the Hill's sphere for Kuiper belt objects. Out beyond the orbit of Neptune, even small dwarf worlds can have gravitational influence over a vast region of space. A body like Charon could be mined and used to build a swarm of habitats in Pluto orbit. The barycentre between Pluto and Charon, could be one such conglomeration.
Most of the mass needed to build a space habitat is shielding. This can be made from almost any material, including water ice.
Although the article doesn't mention them by name, the SMRs are BWR-300X units. So far, I have seen only limited concept design information on this reactor type. But it does appear to be very compact for the amount of power it produces. This reactor could be useful for powering a Martian base. Unlike PWRs, the BWR does not require bulky heat exchangers. That is a significant weight saving.
All LWRs have comparable thermodynamic efficiency: 30-35%. The remainder is waste heat, which is warm water at 30°C. This could have uses for district heating on Earth. It could have uses on Mars as well.