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#1 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » Today 08:35:18

kbd512 wrote:

US 2024 Elections Results Updates

House Elections Results
Republicans secured 211 seats.
Democrats secured 199 seats.

The republicans need 7 more seats for outright control.  Looking at the number of undeclared seats, they are ahead in enough of them that they will probably reach and narrowly surpass 218.  That will make it much easier to pass new legislation.
https://www.foxnews.com/elections/2024/ … ults/house

#2 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Cob, Adobe, Rammed Soil and Dry Stone as Construction Materials. » Today 08:27:15

Why we should build with stone again.
https://youtu.be/VVaWmEI9O1w?si=CxF-SIoXZi83faGe

Interestingly, some quarries are entirely electrically powered.  The manufacturing supply chain for stone is much shorter than reinforced concrete, which requires several mined components.  Natural stone is typically stronger than concrete as well.  But unlike reinforced concrete, stone cannot take tensile forces.

On Mars, underground stone mines could be useful space.  Whereas an open cast mine will require robotic or pressurised vehicles, underground can be a shirtsleeve environment.  Also, the voids created by room a pillar mining, can be sealed off and used as habitation space.  Mars appears to lack the large carbonate stone deposits that are necessary to make portland cement.  Stone may ultimately be a cheaper option on Mars.

#3 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2024-11-06 17:26:12

As an aside, the 2020 election result looks even more suspicious given the recent one.
https://x.com/zerohedge/status/1854144250562429081

The question is, if 2020 was the result of cheating on the Dem side, why didn't they cheat again?  The democrat vote is literally half what it was in 2020.  The 2020 vote seems to defy reasonable explaination.

#4 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2024-11-06 15:51:16

Not everyone reading this board will be happy with the election result.  Politics varies, because life experience varies. But within the (relatively) narrow interests of this board (space colonisation) this is the best US administration since John F Kennedy.  Better in fact.  A return to the moon and onwards to Mars, fits the MAGA ethos perfectly.  And Trump's new bestie and principle technical advisor is none other than Elon Musk.  So far as Mars is concerned, this confluence of political outcomes may be a truly pivotal moment in history.  It is analogous to the passion for exploration that gripped the Iberian peninsular in the 15th century.  That ultimately led to the discovery and settling of America and a worldof wealth and technology that our ancestors could not have imagined.  Maybe we stand at the cusp of something similar right now?  I dare to hope.

#5 Re: Interplanetary transportation » fission fragment propulsion from dusty plasmas » 2024-11-06 14:55:15

If fission products are thermalising, then this is essentially a gas core fission rocket.  There is nothing wrong with that for the purposes of interplanetary propulsion.  It can produces exhaust velocity capable of taking us anywhere in the solar system without staging and with a modest propellant mass fraction in most cases.  It won't be very impressive from a thrust point of view, because waste heat removal will constrain engine power output.

Thermalisation is inevitable unless fuel particles are very small (allowing efficient fission product escape) and have a low areal density, reducing the probability that an ejected fission product collides with a neighbouring fuel particlebefore escaping into the exhaust.  That raises two obvious problem.  (1) It will be challenging to sustain criticality in a diffuse dust unless volume is extremely large, because the mean free path of neutrons is a function of fuel atom density; (2) Power density (and thrust) will be low, because the fuel density is low and the power output from any individual fuel particle is limited by its ability to radiate excess heat beneath its melting point.  That makes acceleration comparable to an ionic propulsion.

One potential solution: have the fuel in the form of long, thin axial fibres, whose axis points to the nozzle exit.  Wrap a superconducting magnetic coil around the engine, producing a static magnetic field with field lines running parallel to the direction of the fibres.  When positively charged fission products escape from the fibres, they will spin along the magnetic field lines.  This forces them to exit the nozzle along magnetic flux lines, reducing their potential to impact neighbouring fuel fibres.

Something like this:
20241106-210808.jpg

#6 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Electrostatic Thruster vs Magnetic Thruster » 2024-11-05 18:24:08

Direct fission based propulsion systems are the only ones that can generate the power needed to deliver high ISP and high thrust simultaneously.  ISP x thrust = power.  The sort of torchship drives that you see on the expanse, capable of exhaust velocity in the 100s km/s whilst accelerating at several gee, are only possible using fission or hybrid fission fusion propulsion.  That is because that combination of high thrust and high ISP requires GW to TW of power for a reasonable sized ship.  There is no way of doing that aside from direct conversion of nuclear energy into kinetic energy.  The fission fragment rocket is one such example.

What stands in their way is politics.  If Trump enters the white house with Elon as his trusted advisor, things like this might really be on the table.  If we could truly unleash the potential of fission for spacecraft propulsion, it would unlock the solar system.  We have known that all along on this board.  In a few hours, we may know whether such dreams will be possible or not.

#7 Re: Terraformation » Interworld Para Terraforming » 2024-11-05 02:44:00

The Neumann Drive has been tested in space according to their website.  I think the most attractive attribute of this drive is its simplicity.  It is an electric arc between two electrodes, vaporising the electrode with the highest current density, i.e. the anode.  That makes it easy to design and model.  Cathode deterioration will be a problem, but a predictable one that can be mitigated by design.  I don't have any data on performance or energy efficiency.  Those are non-trivial concerns.  But the simplicity and abundance of propellant are selling points.

The original Orion developed by Ted Taylor used small fission based charges, which focused explosions using polyethylene lenses.

#8 Re: Terraformation » CO2 traps on Mars » 2024-11-04 14:56:48

CO2 is far more soluble in water than most other gases, due to the formation of ionic carbonic acid.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbonic_acid

Strangely enough, carbonic acid is unstable in the presence of water and decays back into H20 and CO2 quickly.  But the finite halflife of H2CO3 in even a liquid medium results in a high solubility of CO2 at any particular partial pressure.  It is more soluble because it forms covalent bonds with water molecules.

Of course, water on Mars exists as either ice or saturated brines.  Both will be extremely cold, which will extend the half life of H2CO3 and increase CO2 solubility even further.  We know this because colder temperatures mean lower molecular speeds even if carbonic acid decomposition has no minimum activation energy (I don't know if it does or not).  H2CO3 is also denser than water and pure ice, so will tend to sink within solution under gravity.  This explains why deep ocean water is CO2 enriched.

I wonder how this behaviour has played out on Mars over aeons?  Did the formation of carbonic acid result in gradual stripping of the atmosphere as CO2 sank into the porous outer crust?  Will we find pressurised CO2 pockets as we drill into the surface?  Or was the planet's atmosphere sequestered as carbonates deeper within the crust.  It is surely no coincidence that the current atmospheric pressure on Mars is close to vapour pressure of water at its triple point.  A CO2 based atmosphere is unstable on an igneous planet in the presence of liquid water.  This has many implications, both good and bad, for terraforming.

#9 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Electrostatic Thruster vs Magnetic Thruster » 2024-11-04 14:04:00

Recent posts by Void prompted me to look into the Neumann drive.
https://neumannspace.com/neumann-drive/

This is a pulsed electrostatic thruster and appears to be similar to the arcjet.  ISP is estimated to be >1000s.  What distinguishes this drive is its propellant.  Any conductive metallic material can be cast into anode rods, which are vaporised by an electric arc between the rod and cathode.  The arc has a temperature around 100,000K, so exhaust velocity may be several times greater than a chemical rocket.  In an arc jet, the cathode is toroidal and composed of a high melting point metal like tungsten.

What distinguishes the Neumann drive is its propellant.  Metal oxides are abundant in the inner solar system and can be reduced to metallic propellant for casting into rods.  Iron oxide is likely to be the easiest to reduce and most abundant metal oxide.  Many condrite asteroids and lunar regolith even contain natural reduced iron in the form of iron nickel cobalt alloy.  So a ship propelled by a neumann drive is a mule that can eat mountain scrub.  In principle, the electric thruster that could use oxide dusts as well, especially as part of a metal-oxide cermet.  The problems with these propellants are high melting point, high breakdown voltage, poor electrical conductivity and the generation of oxygen ions, which attack metallic components.  This is one of the problems with using Martian CO2 as arcjet propellant.  As the neumann drive propellant is reduced metal, it can function as a simple arcjet, without oxygen ions attacking the cathode.

What I havn't been able to find yet is estimates of power consumption per newton of thrust.  This is important because the ship power supply must be scaled accordingly and more power means more dead weight.  Still, this would appear to be a good candidate propulsion system for the interplanetary ships that Robert D and Kbd512 have discussed.  Thrust will be low, so orbital capture at destination may need to be augmented by chemical rockets.  But in the absence of nuclear pulse propulsion, electric thrusters that run on metal propellant offer versatility whilst maintaining a good ISP.

A life limiting issue with all arcjets is gradual erosion of the cathode.  The anode rods experience the greatest heating due to higher current density.  But the cathode will gradually erode as ions collide with it and material is sputtered into space.  We could deal with this by making the cathode out of something easily replaceable, like pure iron or by coating the cathode with a replaceable sheath.  Maybe something that can be bolted and unbolted between missions.

#10 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » A New Solution to the Fermi Paradox - A Universal Limit on Technology » 2024-10-23 15:38:32

The Nobel prize for chemistry has been awarded to a group of scientists who developed AI software that is capable of accurately predicting protein structure.  It is even possible to design proteins with specific shapes to fit specific applications.  Some of these do not exist in nature.
https://youtu.be/5i2U67TVsRI

This is an incredible achievement that would have been considered sci-fi until a decade ago.  It could herald a new era of designer drugs and even artificial organisms.  But it also tells us something else.  To be able to accurately predict the shape of something as complex as a protein, our understanding of atomic physics must be very close to being complete.  Even subtle errors in our understanding of orbital structure and bond length would throw the results off.  For such a model to work, there can't really be any unknown physics remaining at the atomic level.

#11 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Thermal Energy Storage » 2024-10-23 02:58:44

That is a useful technology.  It provides a way of using intermittent solar power to provide 24/7 air conditioning and refrigeration.  Building up enough ice over winter to cover summer cooling needs might be difficult.  Ice stores about 92.7kWh/m3 of latent heat.  It might work if you have plenty of space or an old barn as you suggest.

Calculating total cooling load required for air conditioning is complicated.  This link provides guidance:
https://aircondlounge.com/cooling-load- … -examples/

The example load for a bedroom is about 3.5kW.  So keeping just 1 room in a house cool for 24 hours, will melt through about 1m3 of ice.  For a house, you would likely need several m3 per day.

#12 Re: Terraformation » The Moon » 2024-10-23 02:48:08

Void, that is an interesting idea.  Keep in mind that stone is brittle, has relatively low thermal conductivity and likely to crack if subject to thermal gradients.  Those gradients create shearing stresses within the material due to differential expansion.  This is why sensible heat storage schemes tend to rely on crushed materials in which the lumps are no bigger than hand sized.

I don't think keeping warm will be that much of a problem on the moon.  Inhabited structures will be covered in at least 2m of regolith for cosmic ray shielding.  Fine regolith has a better insulation value than rockwool under vacuum conditions.  Keeping cool may turn out to be a problem.  Without heat rejection systems, habitats may end up cooking due to internal heat accumulation.

#13 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Why the Green Energy Transition Won’t Happen » 2024-10-22 02:46:08

Gail Tverberg's latest article is well worth reading.
https://ourfiniteworld.com/2024/10/14/o … -even-war/

In her opinion, Climate Change is spin designed to tackle the real issue without publicly acknowledging it: Energy Resource Depletion.  The problem is that the politically popular solutions to climate change (wind and solar power) have thus far proven incapable of replacing the abundant low-cost energy provided by fossil fuels during the post-war growth period of the second half of the 20th century.

Growth in OECD countries has been anaemic since 1973.  Until the first oil crisis, wages and living standards were growing rapidly.  But growth stalled after 1973.  Real inflation adjusted wages for the bottom 90% of US workers has not grown in the past 50 years.  Wages for the top 10% have grown, but even this growth appears to have stalled.  Why is this happening?  Wealth is a product of surplus energy.  Whilst overall energy production has risen, the Energy Return on Energy Invested (EROEI) of new energy projects is no longer as high as it was for the abundant onshore oil & gas resources that met world demand until the 1970s.  The energy cost of accessing new energy has increased steadily since the early 1970s.

#14 Re: Human missions » Going Solar...the best solution for Mars. » 2024-10-18 16:49:35

Kbd512, good post.

If Mars does indeed contain large amounts of trapped methane, it will make the job of building up solar thermal capacity a lot easier.
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adm8443

We can reduce powdered iron oxides to iron metal by blowing methane over it at 800°C.

4Fe203 + 3CH4 = 8Fe + 3CO2 + 6H2O

The iron powder can be converted into mild steel using an electric furnace.  We can also use methane to make acetic acid.  That would allow food production without sunlight.  A large chunk of the 100GWe that was calculated as being needed to support a million people is needed for food production.  The original plan was to grow plants under LED lights.  If Mars fossil methane can be used to support food production through acetate production, then we avoid the need for a huge chunk of power supply.  Martian natural gas is a game changer, if we can find it.  Even without atmospheric oxygen to burn it in, natural methane would be an enormously useful resource on Mars.

#15 Re: Life support systems » Vertical Farming » 2024-10-18 07:07:33

It has been a while since we talked about food production.  This company is using acetate to grow plants in the dark using vertical farming.
https://medium.com/@SquareRootsIndoorFa … c5a8a5765c

Ultimately, this is how most food will need to be produced on Mars.  We will still use greenhouses and natural photosynthesis to grow high value plants like herbs, spices and medicine.  But pressure domes are too expensive for staples.  Most food will be grown in compact underground spaces.

#16 Re: Human missions » Going Solar...the best solution for Mars. » 2024-10-17 16:38:41

Whilst solar powerplants may be visually unappealing, a larger problem on Mars is the materials needed to build them.  On Earth, photovoltaics are the most resource intensive energy source that we have by a significant margin.  On Earth, solar PV has experienced almost miraculous price drops since the turn of the century.  A large part of this is due to the use of very cheap coal-based energy, mass production and use of slave labour.  None of those things exist on Mars and sunlight is only half as intense.  That means to produce the same power at any lattitude, the plant must be twice as large.  Using solar thermal power, most of the material inputs can be steel or cast iron, which are much less energy intensive than silicon-based PV.

Power density will still be low, requiring a lot of refined metal for each MWh of electricity or heat.  This presents a significant problem on Mars because refined materials will be expensive.  The high energy density of uranium makes it a more desirable optionmeven if nuclearfuel must be imported from Earth.  A single gram of uranium will yield some 21,000kWh of heat in a fission reactor.  This pretty much guarentees that fission will be the dominant energy source on Mars because the powerplant needs only a few percent of the materials needed to build a comparable solar plant.

#17 Re: Not So Free Chat » An Englishman's Home Is His Redoubt (British Decline And Fall) » 2024-10-15 07:17:51

This man explains why he is leaving the UK.
https://youtu.be/caJ6u4UsQN4?si=yo-QIjdcRUwPTZx4

The 1990s were a great time to be alive in Britain.  Since then, living standards have collapsed.  Taxes are high, inflation is rampant and public services are struggling.  The only thing I would take issue with in his video is that he doesn't understand what First World means.  That expression comes from the Cold War.  First World refered to the capitalist OECD countries.  Second World was the communist block.  Third world is everyone else.  It is an expression of economic system not affluence.  Many people confuse it as such.

I realised recently that all the taxes I pay account for well over half of my income.  I am certainly not rich.  I am what would have been called middle class.  I am a chartered engineer and earn a good wage (before tax).  My wage probably puts me in the top 10% of earners.  I have assets.  And yet, I don't have much money left at the end of each month.  The amount we are spending on food and energy swallows whatever the government doesn't take from me in tax.  On paper, my wages have quadrupled since I started work 22 years ago.  In real terms, my spending power has stood still.  My wages are more heavily taxed, inflation reduces the value of what remains and it has to support five people.  It is getting progressively more difficult to live a basic life in the UK.

#18 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Rubble Pile Asteroids - How to work with Them » 2024-10-15 02:39:42

This video discusses metal production and seperation from lunar regolith.
https://youtu.be/xH4Ki6TxRTs?si=TnEn9ER04HanhaZ_

The same process could work with the various silicates present in stony asteroids.  One major advancement that the video discusses is the use of iron-chromium alloy electrodes for magma electrolysis.  As both iron and chromium are relatively abundant on the moon, this removes a potential bottleneck from magma electrolysis.  Previously, carbon based electrodes were expected to be used.

There is more discussion on the use of calcium as a reducing agent.  Calcium oxide bonds with silica, yielding calcium silicate which floats on top of the melt.  Calcium can also be used to remove different metals.  By adding selective quantities of calcium metal, different metals in the mix can be selectively reduced and seperated.  The electrolysis cell can then focus on reducing calcium oxide back to metal.

Melting the various oxides is energy intensive.  The author expects this can be achieved by solar concentrators, which will reduce the amount of electricity needed to produce metals.  If metal reduction is accomplished using calcium, then calcium oxide electrolysis is the only part of the process that needs electricity.  Everything else is done using concentrated solar heat.  In free space, this gives us a significant advantage.  Concentrating solar heat is cheap and easy and requires focusing a concave mirror at the sun.  Electricity will be more expensive, as we need either photovoltaics or turbomachinery.

#19 Re: Interplanetary transportation » a Venus Cycler » 2024-10-15 00:11:08

TH, why deliver a Venus instrument package to an asteroid?  Why not put it on a probe whose trajectory can be optimum for what you want to study?

A Venus cycler idea is interesting.  The orbital period of Venus is much shorter than Mars and the orbit is tighter, suggesting more frequent close approaches.  So it could work better for Venus than for Mars.  That is assuming anyone wants to go to Venus of course.  An Earth Venus Mercury cycler is also possible.

#20 Re: Human missions » Starship is Go... » 2024-10-15 00:02:27

I have to admit, I was sceptical about the chops sticks idea of catching the super heavy booster on decent.  It looked to me like it would result in heavy point loads on the air frame.  It also requires very precise alignment to be able to work.  But they tested it and it did work.  Well done SpaceX!

#21 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Windmills as heat exchangers and motors. » 2024-10-14 23:50:35

Void, I'm sorry to hear about your health problems.  I hope you feel better soon.

The idea of using wind turbine blades as the heat source for a heat pump is an interesting one.  The speed of blades as they pass through the air will have a thinning effect on the thermal boundary layer on the leading edge of the blades.  This will improve convective heat transfer coefficient, allowing the blades to absorb more energy from the passing air.  So this idea has some strengths.  One potential issue is that air temperatures decline with height and the wind is often strongest when the air is coldest (i.e during winter).  But it could work.

A similar idea is to use wind turbine shaft power to run a heat pump, whether air source or ground source.  Heat is much easier to store than electricity.  So using the wind to provide heat is an application that is more compatible with the intermittent nature of wind energy.

#22 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » A New Solution to the Fermi Paradox - A Universal Limit on Technology » 2024-10-14 05:51:50

Observations from the New Horizons probe confirm that no new physics is needed to explain the amount of background light in the universe.
https://youtu.be/4SZHy54vyrI?si=-c98ms6tV2fEYhgq

Increasingly, what we observe in nature is well predicted by our theories.  The LHC confirmed the existence of the Higgs Boson.  Its mass was almost exactly what was predicted by the standard model.  Recent measurements of mass of the W Boson, are also exactly what was predicted by the standard model.  There seems to be very little room for new physics beyond what is already understood.  Our model of the universe, whilst not complete, is certainly approaching completion.

#23 Re: Interplanetary transportation » A Mars cycler (or Earth–Mars cycler) is a kind of space trajectory » 2024-10-13 00:31:46

This asteroid has an orbit that could make it useful for cycler applications.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/(308635)_2005_YU55

A minimum ISRU use for these bodies (assuming we can mine them) would be to use raw regolith material as cosmic ray shielding.  If the material can be used to fill some kind of polymer bag around habitat modules, then we have a shielding solution.

#24 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » A New Solution to the Fermi Paradox - A Universal Limit on Technology » 2024-10-11 19:38:14

kbd512 wrote:

I don't think we've "peaked" at all.  We're just getting warmed up with the new generation of energy / food / medicine production, computing, AI, modeling / simulation of all engineering domains, 3D printing, and the list goes on.  We also have gigantic interplanetary rockets twice as powerful as a Saturn V, fully reusable, operating at a minor fraction of the Saturn V's cost.  What more does everyone here want?  We can only drive at so many different solutions at one time.  The best is yet to come, but all good things come in their own time.  Patience is still a virtue.

The only universal limit on technology is the human imagination and acceptance that when physics forbids one way of solving a problem, there's always another unexplored option waiting to be accepted as the solution.

That statement is fundamentally false.  I will explain why.

Firstly, human technology has very definitely peaked since the 1960s.  Peaked does not mean halted of course.  But there is a definite and noticable slowing of pace.  What we are seeing now is refinements, rather than fundamentally new technologies.  Microelectronics are the significant outlier that have seen great progress in the past three decades.  But this is now reaching physical limits.  A transistor cannot get smaller than a single atom.  This is a good example of how physics imposes ultimate limits that are simply impossible for us to cross.  This isn't a problem that results from failure of imagination.  It is a constraint imposed upon us by the fundamental nature of matter.  It is not negotiable or traversable.  It is an ultimate impasse, a hard limit that no amount of optimistic thinking or inventiveness will get past.  Not now or at any point in the future.

The same is true of many other things.  There are limits to the ultimate strength of materials.  The strength of any new material that we develop in the future, will be constrained by the strength of electrostatic force between protons and electrons.  There are limits to the melting point of materials, that ultimately come from the same place.  It isn't a coincidence that our strongest materials have high melting points.  There is a fundamental speed limit to the universe.  Limits to achievable energy densities.  These aren't things that new technologies can get past.  Indeed, technology is constrained to forever work within them.  We will never be able to build warp drives if doing so requires energy density comparable to a black hole.  It isn't possible to build things like that out of materials that we can use.  Likewise, the Heisenburg uncertainty principle tells us we can never build a Star Trek style transporter.  It is impossible with technology we have now and we know it will remain impossible with any technology that we may develop in the future.  We will never have Star Trek style tractor beams, for the simple reason that standard model physics doesn't allow us to produce beams of gravitons.

The laws of physics are finite.  There are only so many ways that particles can interact.  This tells us that no area of science can be infinitely complex.  The more we discover, the less there remains to be discovered.  Given that technology works within the bounds of physics, it follows that there are a finite number of permutations that we can develop.  Technology can continuously adjust to new circumstances, but it cannot grow infinitely complex or capable, because it can only operate within the bounds of the physical laws of the universe.  This tells us that the huge growth in new technology that we have seen this past 200 years, is likely to be a historic, one-time transition rather than being characteristic of a continuous state.  Technology is still developing in its complexity, but this is showing diminishing returns.  The 1950s bought us jet engines, for example.  The 2000s brought us new and improved jet engines, with better efficiency.  It didn't bring us compact micro-fusion reactors.  The laws of physics constrains what we can build.

#25 Re: Interplanetary transportation » Aldrin Cyclers and Asteroid Belt Cyclers » 2024-10-11 18:59:35

Kbd512, I havn't read your links yet; I will do tomorrow.  Cyclers are pretty much useless for transport of freight.  These are really just space stations on orbits that make close approaches of planets.  Having a fixed orbit saves having to spend fuel on every trip.  Cyclers are useful for transporting people, who need comfortable, radiation shielded environments, preferably in gravity and with as much living space as possible.  But using a cycler to transport freight won't save any propellant.  If the freight is live animals, or plants or tissue samples, then a cycler could cut total cosmic ray doses to that freight.  But they actually increase dV.

Ultimately, cyclers could be a good way of transporting people between planets once we have enough of them that people can use small transfer vehicles to travel between them.  With enough cyclers, the time from Earth to Mars and back again, should be not much more than it woukd be using an interplanetary ship.  But the cycler is an order of magnitude more comfortable.  Essentially a flying hotel.  We can do that because once established on its orbit, no more propellant is needed.  It just follows a permanent elliptical orbit that grazes the orbits of Earth and Mwrs.

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