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#1 Re: Human missions » An astronaut is urging NASA to form new spacesuit program » Today 19:11:28

Asking about Mars 0.5 bar pressure gets

While there is no current operational Mars-specific space suit, designs for future Mars exploration often involve low-pressure systems or alternative technologies to improve mobility.
Current and historical gas-pressurized suits for Extravehicular Activities (EVAs) operate at a lower pressure than Earth's atmosphere, typically around 4.3 psi (about 0.29 atm or 0.29 bar), to provide adequate oxygen and enable mobility. Russian and future NASA suits may be pressurized to approximately 0.56 bar (0.5 atmospheres) to shorten the time required for astronauts to adapt their bodies to the lower pressure environment and avoid decompression sickness (the bends).
Suit Pressurization Methods
Space suits must protect astronauts from the near-vacuum environment of space/Mars, but high gas pressure makes a suit rigid and difficult to move in, like an inflated balloon. Engineers use two primary methods to address this:
Gas-Pressurized Suits: These are the traditional "bag of oxygen" suits used by NASA and other agencies. They operate at low pressure (e.g., 0.29 to 0.56 bar of pure oxygen) to balance mobility and life support requirements.
Mechanical Counterpressure (MCP) Suits: Also known as "BioSuits," these concepts use tight, elastic garments with embedded materials to apply direct pressure to the skin, effectively "shrink-wrapping" the astronaut. The pressure is physical rather than pneumatic. This approach could offer greater mobility, eliminate puncture risks associated with gas suits, and simplify thermal management on Mars. Research on these is ongoing at institutions like MIT (the BioSuit) and others.
While 0.5 bar is a potential operating pressure for future suits using pure oxygen, the specific designs are still in development and testing phases

Which means adapt or use as designed.....

#2 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Domed habitats... - ...size, materials, and more. » Today 19:02:22

Stop saying your AI has solutions.....do the thinking.
It did not see Mars quakes, It did not see the frozen mars cycles of water and co2, it did not see that people could and did need to go in and out of the dome....

#3 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Designing insitu Mars equipment garage » Today 18:59:39

Do you have the list of construction equipment that will be sent? The the design can not go forward until it is known. If you do then what are the statically type or number and dimensions as these are part of how a structure is designed as the floors need to support the mass without cracking. Plus you still need it to fit size and mass on a flight manifest to Mars.

I proposed a need to help in making the equipment last beyond this initial construction otherwise the Dome fails if any piece breaks.

#4 Re: Human missions » An astronaut is urging NASA to form new spacesuit program » Today 13:25:25

Mars suits need advanced mobility, durability (dust/temp), and life support for equipment work, moving beyond bulky gas-filled suits to designs like SpaceX's agile EVA suit or concepts like the tight BioSuit, focusing on enhanced joints, integrated HUDs, and specialized materials (Orthofabric) to allow astronauts to perform complex tasks efficiently in Mars' low gravity and harsh dust. NASA's Z-series prototypes, Axiom suits, and material tests (SHERLOC) are all pushing for lighter, more agile, and reliable suits for exploration and maintenance.
Key Design Features for Mars Work:
Enhanced Mobility: Improved joint designs (like those in SpaceX's suit) and lighter materials to counter Mars' lower gravity and allow complex arm/hand movements for tool use.
Dust Protection: Highly resistant materials (e.g., Teflon, Orthofabric) to block pervasive Martian dust, a major issue for equipment.
Integrated Technology: Heads-Up Displays (HUDs) in helmets (like SpaceX's) for real-time data and easier task management.
Adjustability & Fit: Sizing features (adjustable shoulders/waist) to fit diverse astronauts and improve comfort for long work periods.
Durability: Built for millions of wear cycles, far exceeding lunar needs, using advanced composites and materials tested on the Perseverance rover.
Examples of Suit Concepts:
SpaceX EVA Suit: Evolved from Dragon IVA, focusing on agility, 3D-printed helmets, advanced thermal layers for extreme temps, and scalability.
NASA Z-2/Z-series: Prototypes emphasizing wide motion, docking, and lightweight composites, tested in extreme environments.
BioSuit: A tight, stretchy suit applying pressure directly to the skin, offering more natural movement than gas-pressurized suits.
Axiom Suits: Next-gen designs for NASA, focusing on broad adjustability, comfort, and modern tech for complex tasks.
Challenges & Solutions:
Bulky vs. Agile: Moving from bulky gas-filled suits (like Apollo's) to designs that don't hinder simple tasks like tightening a bolt.
Life Support: Developing efficient systems for heat rejection (like Swimmie) and ensuring extended survival in case of minor punctures.
Material Science: Ongoing tests (SHERLOC experiment) on various materials to find the best protection against Mars' unique environment

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_suit

NASA Unveils New Mars Spacesuits

1464369609-3632-nasa-unveils-new-mars-spacesuits-l.webp

Mars spacesuit risk management focuses on protecting astronauts from extreme hazards (radiation, dust, temps, vacuum) and operational challenges (injury, life support failure, CO2 buildup, decompression), using rigorous design (Injury Modes & Effects Analysis, radiation shielding, better seals), advanced training (pre-breathing), constant monitoring (SFIT tools), and comprehensive protocols to ensure long-duration mission safety, balancing performance needs with crew survival, says NASA's risk management process for human spaceflight and NASA's approach to EVA suits for lunar and Mars missions. Key risks include dust contamination, thermal extremes, radiation exposure, and physiological strain from frequent, demanding EVAs, requiring redundant life support and injury mitigation.
Key Risks & Mitigation Strategies
Radiation & Dust: Martian regolith (dust) is abrasive, adhesive, and can damage equipment/harm humans; radiation is intense.
Mitigation: Advanced suit materials, better seals, dust-resistant designs, habitat shielding.
Physiological Strain/Injury: More frequent & demanding EVAs on Mars (24 hrs/week) increase injury risk compared to ISS.
Mitigation: SFIT (Spacesuit Fit & Injury Technologies) to predict/monitor injury, improved suit ergonomics (e.g., Z-2.5 design), better fit.
Life Support/Environmental Control: Risks like CO2 buildup, oxygen depletion, humidity, fire, and decompression sickness are critical.
Mitigation: Redundant systems, CO2 scrubbers, pre-breathing protocols (pure O2 for nitrogen purge) to prevent decompression sickness (DCS).
Operational & Technical: Design complexity, maintenance, long-duration reliability, and emergency scenarios.
Mitigation: NASA's formal risk management process (Human System Risk Board), detailed Maintenance plans, vacuum chamber testing, and designs for quick emergency return.
NASA's Approach
Formal Risk Management: Uses detailed causal diagrams (directed acyclic graphs) to map hazards to mission outcomes, improving stakeholder communication.
Focus on Exploration EVAs: Recognizing ISS EVAs (slower pace, fewer per mission) differ greatly from Mars needs, developing suits for higher performance and safety.
Integrated Systems: Designing suits (like xEMU) to support multiple programs (Artemis, ISS, Gateway) while managing unique mission risks

#5 Re: Life support systems » Airlock Design for Mars » Today 13:23:35

Design goes after specifications of requirements are generated and reasons for what is required. That is mechanical and electrical engineering at its simplest form

1. dimension's of height, width, depth still not known...
2. safety interlocks for acceptable use parameters.
3. emergency contingency for crews that are out of air ect...

lots of stuff is required to be discussed long before the actual chamber is designed and for other features that are required. it is not a box with doors and pumps.

You are also ignoring risk management to people...

#6 Re: Life support systems » Airlock Design for Mars » Today 12:15:59

Airlocks can and do many functions as desired in a sequence to remove issues that we might find. This is how humans think about problems that might be identified.

So we are going to need many inline locks to do what we require for a full development of a Dome entrance.

#7 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Airlocks » Today 12:10:52

AI can not always give the same reference content for an easily puncturable space suite where cuts can occur killing the mechanic by venture of being in a near vacuum.


tahanson43206 wrote:

For SpaceNut ... re https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 44#p236544

The text you pasted about airlocks looks reasonable, but there are no references.

This forum needs to get in the habit of providing references for every post that might be assumed by a reader to be something other than an opinion.

I like the discussion about multiple stages of air locks.  That looks really tedious to me.

The worry about contaminating Mars is understandable for an initial expedition.

It has nothing to do with Calliban's dome airlock.  We aren't going to be worried about contamination of Mars.

You have already started discussion because you are (apparently) worried about CO in Mars atmosphere that might enter the habitat.

I have tried to encourage you to guide your AI to produce useful guidance on how to do that. The AI may have found some NASA documentation but I don't see that has much if anything to do with Calliban's dome.

You provided a problem to solve. Now please guide AI to find a solution.

First AI does not find solutions that is a human function of gained knowledge.

Caliban's Dome has no airlock initially..to exit or enter....

This is something that we are trying to make real... AI is just a tool in the box...

The outer can  also have a cleaning port entrance to minimize sand and dust using air spray nozzles to push it away. Think car port...

#8 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Designing insitu Mars equipment garage » Today 12:05:08

A not with a restrictive easily puncturable space suit where cuts can occur killing the mechanic by venture of being in a near vacuum.

1464369609-3632-nasa-unveils-new-mars-spacesuits-l.webp

tahanson43206 wrote:

For SpaceNut ... re https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 44#p236544

The text you pasted about airlocks looks reasonable, but there are no references.

This forum needs to get in the habit of providing references for every post that might be assumed by a reader to be something other than an opinion.

I like the discussion about multiple stages of air locks.  That looks really tedious to me.

The worry about contaminating Mars is understandable for an initial expedition.

It has nothing to do with Calliban's dome airlock.  We aren't going to be worried about contamination of Mars.

You have already started discussion because you are (apparently) worried about CO in Mars atmosphere that might enter the habitat.

I have tried to encourage you to guide your AI to produce useful guidance on how to do that. The AI may have found some NASA documentation but I don't see that has much if anything to do with Calliban's dome.

You provided a problem to solve. Now please guide AI to find a solution.

#9 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Domed habitats... - ...size, materials, and more. » Today 12:01:06

Some solutions do not come from the one that finds a problem and requires not AI but people to think about what it is that could be a fix.

AI just searches keywords and try's to match what it thinks you are looking for.

#10 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Operating System Updates Apple Linux Microsoft Raspberry Pi Other » Today 11:54:57

tahanson43206 wrote:

For SpaceNut re Post #4030

Thanks for the link to the Data General article on Wikipedia.... That is a ** very ** interesting article...

My work environment did not include exposure to Data General, so I'm glad to have this opportunity to learn about that inspired group of people who spun off from Dec ... I am also interested to learn that you were part of that successful venture!  I don't know if you noticed, but toward the bottom of the article, it was reported that the control panel of Data General may have inspired the front panel of the famous MITS Altair 8800, which I was able to acquire in it's original kit form.

(th)


Glad you found this interesting.

I also work in the component R&D lab developing CD-ROMs before they even decided on the plastic disk and more.

#11 Re: Life support systems » Crops » Today 11:52:45

tahanson43206 wrote:

For RobertDyck re #341 .... thanks for the word picture of what sounds like a feast for the occasion!  Bravo!

Here's a culinary question for you ... the host for lunch yesterday served a baked carrots dish with orange carrots, yellow ones and black ones.  I thought the colors were for other vegetables, but other guests assured me they were carrots.

Have you ever heard of non-orange carrots.  Somehow I had never encountered them before.

(th)

RobertDyck wrote:

Carrots were originally white. Then purple and yellow carrots arose. There are also red carrots, and they all existed for centuries. Here's a history, with cartoon video. It's only 6 minutes, 12 seconds.

YouTube: Why Are Carrots Orange? It's Actually Politics

This sort belongs here as well due to genetic cross breeding of similar plants to get a new versus that has different characteristic.

#12 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Operating System Updates Apple Linux Microsoft Raspberry Pi Other » Today 09:35:06

tahanson43206 wrote:

For SpaceNut .... thanks for the reminder of Data General!

I asked Google for a refresh, and it found a number of references...

Here's one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rccMfdxMe1U

The comments section is filled with memories of people who worked with or on that system.

(th)

You found the front runner to the modern PC in single card form. They had its own chip sets making the unit. They had a foundry out in Sunny vale California before the industry went over seas. I actually trouble shot the individual cards that made up the system.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_General_Nova

#13 Re: Not So Free Chat » NASA's new leader makes his priorities clear on day one » Today 09:16:53

Some will say that the wave off of issues with Starliner is another

#15 Re: Human missions » Boeing Starliner OFT-2 » Today 08:59:44

Safety panel: NASA downplayed Boeing Starliner problems

Sounds more like management not engineers making what could be another disaster in the making.

#16 Re: Life support systems » Airlock Design for Mars » Today 08:45:01

You AI generated content

A Mars airlock for clean entry focuses on planetary protection by minimizing Earth microbe transfer and Martian dust contamination, often using multi-chamber designs with dedicated suit ports (like NASA's MESA concept) for external donning/doffing, specialized dust mitigation (air showers, wiping), and integrated suit/equipment storage to keep the habitat sterile, essentially acting as a "mudroom" to prevent biological and particulate cross-contamination during crew EVAs.
Key Design Principles for Mars Airlocks:
Multi-Chamber System: Instead of one chamber, systems often propose two or three sections (antechambers) to create distinct zones for suit preparation, dust removal, and entry into the habitat.
External Suit Donning/Doffing (MESA Concept): A key innovation is the Mars EVA Suit Airlock (MESA), where suits attach externally to the habitat. The crew enters the suit from the habitat, then exits the airlock for EVA, keeping suit surfaces away from the main living area.
Dust Mitigation:
Air Showers & Wiping Stations: Integrated systems to blast/wipe dust off suits and equipment before entering the main habitat.
Specialized Ports: Airlocks have dedicated ports for suits, allowing them to be docked and maintained externally.
Integrated Storage: Airlocks function as storage for suits, tools, and emergency supplies (water, rations) to keep them outside the primary habitable zone, as discussed in this concept by Jenkins, accessed via newmars.com.
Planetary Protection Focus: The primary driver is preventing terrestrial microbes from contaminating Mars (forward contamination) and potentially harmful Martian materials from entering the habitat (backward contamination).
How it Works (Conceptual Example):
Before EVA: Astronauts don suits within the habitat, pass through the airlock into the external suit port, and detach.
After EVA: Astronauts re-enter the airlock, attach suits, go through decontamination (air/wipes), remove suits in the inner chamber, and enter the habitat, leaving contaminated gear behind.
These designs aim to reconcile human exploration needs with strict planetary protection requirements, making the airlock a critical interface for keeping Mars clean

#17 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Airlocks » Today 08:44:19

A Mars airlock for clean entry focuses on planetary protection by minimizing Earth microbe transfer and Martian dust contamination, often using multi-chamber designs with dedicated suit ports (like NASA's MESA concept) for external donning/doffing, specialized dust mitigation (air showers, wiping), and integrated suit/equipment storage to keep the habitat sterile, essentially acting as a "mudroom" to prevent biological and particulate cross-contamination during crew EVAs.
Key Design Principles for Mars Airlocks:
Multi-Chamber System: Instead of one chamber, systems often propose two or three sections (antechambers) to create distinct zones for suit preparation, dust removal, and entry into the habitat.
External Suit Donning/Doffing (MESA Concept): A key innovation is the Mars EVA Suit Airlock (MESA), where suits attach externally to the habitat. The crew enters the suit from the habitat, then exits the airlock for EVA, keeping suit surfaces away from the main living area.
Dust Mitigation:
Air Showers & Wiping Stations: Integrated systems to blast/wipe dust off suits and equipment before entering the main habitat.
Specialized Ports: Airlocks have dedicated ports for suits, allowing them to be docked and maintained externally.
Integrated Storage: Airlocks function as storage for suits, tools, and emergency supplies (water, rations) to keep them outside the primary habitable zone, as discussed in this concept by Jenkins, accessed via newmars.com.
Planetary Protection Focus: The primary driver is preventing terrestrial microbes from contaminating Mars (forward contamination) and potentially harmful Martian materials from entering the habitat (backward contamination).
How it Works (Conceptual Example):
Before EVA: Astronauts don suits within the habitat, pass through the airlock into the external suit port, and detach.
After EVA: Astronauts re-enter the airlock, attach suits, go through decontamination (air/wipes), remove suits in the inner chamber, and enter the habitat, leaving contaminated gear behind.
These designs aim to reconcile human exploration needs with strict planetary protection requirements, making the airlock a critical interface for keeping Mars clean

#18 Re: Meta New Mars » Housekeeping » Today 08:40:53

You found the front runner to the modern PC in single card form. The had its own chip sets making the unit. They had a foundry out in Sunny vale California before the industry went over seas.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_General_Nova

#19 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Domed habitats... - ...size, materials, and more. » Today 08:37:47

You must investigate issues before coming up with solutions, which may be just as straight forward.

Addition non AI  generated content here

#20 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Designing insitu Mars equipment garage » Today 08:35:21

tahanson43206 wrote:

For SpaceNut .... Your new topic about garage/hanger volume looks promising.  I don't think anyone will be able to fill such a volume with very expensive clean air. Clean air will be reserved for use in habitats, and inside sealed vehicles.  I can't imagine anyone being able to afford to take the time to pump down a garage or hanger sized volume just to work on a vehicle.

I think it makes more sense to bring the vehicle into a volume where you can close the huge door and let dust settle to the floor.

Mechanical sweepers might be a way to collect the dust, because vacuums aren't going to work in the thin Mars atmosphere.

Ingenuity showed that large fans ** can ** work on Mars.

It might make sense to blow dust off of vehicles before driving them into a garage or hanger.

Humans may have experience performing maintenance in sand storms. It's not something I've heard much about.

(th)


I would say that the standard double door system needs a second set to be able to do a cleaning room function before entry into the dome.

We would also use a SCUBA system which is similar to those used in Desert Storm.

wilcox-life-support-patroit-5510-config-1.png

As seen you get a bottled air system 5000 psi  composite tank with a filtered snorkel to airlock air using an air mask.

#21 Exploration to Settlement Creation » Designing insitu Mars equipment garage » Yesterday 18:08:54

SpaceNut
Replies: 7

Whether the equipment is delivered by a cargo starship or via a Conex box delivery systemFKeuKW1.jpg the end is to protect the supply that is very expensive to provide..

A support structure to protect the equipment and crew so as to be able to work in shirt sleeves.

Designing an in-situ Mars equipment garage involves leveraging local resources (ISRU) to provide robust shielding and a pressurized, sealed environment for maintenance, repair, and storage of rovers and other surface equipment.
Key Design Principles
Radiation and Micrometeorite Shielding: The primary structure must protect sensitive equipment from intense solar and cosmic radiation, as well as micrometeorite impacts. This is typically achieved by covering the habitat with a thick layer of Martian regolith.
Airlock and Pressurization System: A multi-stage airlock system is critical for maintaining internal pressure and preventing the ingress of toxic Martian dust (perchlorates) into the main habitat or garage area.
ISRU Material Use: Construction should prioritize the use of local materials (regolith, basalt) to minimize the payload required from Earth.
Modular and Expandable: The design should allow for phased construction, starting with an initial structure and allowing for future expansion as the mission grows.
Construction Methodology
An autonomous, phased approach is generally proposed for construction before human arrival.
Site Preparation: Robotic systems select and prepare the site, which may involve excavating a cavity or a lava tube to utilize natural shielding.
Autonomous Construction: Autonomous 3D-printing robots build the primary structure using a blend of fused regolith and potentially imported binders or prefabricated components like carbon nanotubes.
Internal Outfitting: Inflatable modules or rigid internal liners (e.g., HDPE plastic to provide an airtight seal) are deployed and connected within the protective shell.
Functional Requirements
Vehicle Maintenance Bay: A large, climate-controlled area for repairing rovers and other large equipment.
Airlock System: A large, vehicle-sized airlock for moving equipment in and out, with systems to remove dust.
Power and Communication: Connection to the base's power grid (e.g., nuclear fission units) and communication networks.
Storage and Workshop: Areas for storing spare parts, tools, and raw materials, including a manufacturing bay for 3D-printing spare parts from metals and plastics.

Structure type is not defined as we must know what type of early equipment type as well as the fuels that they will need to make use of.  It is suggested to be a separate attached system with possible machine shop capability.

Other suggestions is to possibly make this the staging start foundry for metals processing.

#22 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Operating System Updates Apple Linux Microsoft Raspberry Pi Other » Yesterday 18:01:08

Now that is going back to my early years working at Data General which made a clone of the machine called NOVA, 1982 was the year.

#23 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Domed habitats... - ...size, materials, and more. » Yesterday 17:07:41

The airlock once closed for entry with the mars air within it is then re-pressurized with the dome air that was with in it for the exit from the dome. Sure the quantity of air will be diluted but it still will not be processed until its mixed in with the dome air.
The dust will contain hex a chlorides and other compounds' that will not get filtered as well as the space suits and tools will also have it stuck to it by static cling.

#24 Re: Not So Free Chat » NASA's new leader makes his priorities clear on day one » Yesterday 17:00:43

One of the items which has occurred is the competition for the lunar lander and I can feel that delays are only part of the reasons.

#25 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Airlocks » Yesterday 16:49:02

I was thinking also about the dome construction equipment repair for when it not in use, So a shirt sleeve repair garage is also needed with an air lock that is vehicle sized as well.

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