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#1 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Ring Habitat on Mars Doughnut Torus » 2026-01-22 19:06:45

A 10-megawatt (MW) nuclear reactor designed for Mars, often classified as a "Megapower" or small modular reactor (SMR), would likely be a compact, transportable unit, potentially fitting on a large flatbed truck or within a Starship payload bay, measuring roughly 10–20 meters in height. Such units are designed to operate within a small footprint (kilopower systems).

Key Details on 10MW Mars Reactor Sizes:
Scale: While 1–10 kilowatt (kW) reactors (Kilopower) are the size of a wastepaper basket, a 10 MW unit (10,000 kW) requires a much larger, though still "modular" design.

Dimensions: Similar Megapower designs for space applications use compact, modular layouts with Stirling engines, enabling units to be transported in segments and assembled on-site, possibly similar in footprint to a small industrial building.


Configuration: These reactors are often designed to be buried in the Martian regolith for shielding or placed in a shallow crater.

Power Density: A 10 MW reactor is considered a "micro-reactor" in terrestrial terms (1–20 MW) but provides significant power for, say, propellant production and colony infrastructure.

For context, a 10 MW system produces 1,000 times the power of the 10 kW units currently being developed by NASA for early Mars missions

Maximizing electrical power output from a nuclear reactor delivered by Starship to a base on Mars

https://marspedia.org/Nuclear_power

The Martian Surface Reactor: An Advanced Nuclear Power Station for Manned Extraterrestrial Exploration

A 10-megawatt (MW) nuclear reactor for Mars is significantly more compact than an equivalent solar farm, with a core unit that can fit into a relatively small area, although safety considerations require a wider exclusion zone. While current NASA "Kilopower" technology is in the 10-kilowatt (kW) range (40kW total for a base), a 10 MW system, which is 1,000 times more powerful, would likely be a small modular reactor (SMR) or a similar design.

Physical Size of Unit: A 10 MW SMR or similar reactor could likely fit within a very small footprint, potentially just a few hundred square meters for the reactor building itself, similar to, or smaller than, a small Earth-based SMR.

Total Footprint & Safety Zone: While the core, power conversion, and radiator systems are compact, radiation shielding requires an exclusion zone. Based on safety considerations for space-based reactors, a 10 MW reactor would likely require an exclusion area of several acres to several dozen acres (considerably less than 1 square mile, which is 640 acres) for safety and security, though this can be minimized if the reactor is buried or if the zone is sparsely used.

Comparison to Solar: A 10 MW solar farm on Mars would require roughly 50-100 acres, and potentially up to hundreds of acres for necessary battery storage. A 10 MW nuclear reactor would have a drastically smaller, more localized footprint.

Key Factors for 10 MW Nuclear on Mars:
Safety Requirements: Radiation shielding, such as burying the reactor, is essential to reduce the exclusion zone size.

Mass vs. Size: The primary challenge is not the area required to build it on the ground, but the mass and volume limitations of transporting it from Earth to Mars, often requiring assembly on-site.

Efficiency: Small modular reactors (SMRs) are highly efficient, with an estimated capacity factor of around 90 percent

Navigating Nuclear: Microreactors, SMRs, and Traditional Plants

#2 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Mars structure heating requirements » 2026-01-22 18:48:11

tahanson43206 wrote:

For SpaceNut re interesting post about heat loop on Mars.

https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.ph … 93#p237493

Your AI friend seems to have understood that the temperature of the regolith a few meters down is a reliable number, well below the freezing point of water. In another topic, kbd512 added a post to one of Void's topics about use of SCO2 for a geothermal energy harvesting system.

Please ask your AI friend to design a heat pump system that will harvest planetary thermal energy on Mars.

I am hoping the idea is practical, because it would solve a lot of pesky problems.  We humans are going to have to invest energy to live on Mars, so learning how to leverage our investment to harvest thermal energy from the planet itself seems to me like something well work pursuing.

(th)

I did find references that show the loop needs to be a bit deeper but we are not pulling heat as much as giving the loop which is part of the heat pump which uses compression to make heat or in reverse to make cooling.

The system could couple the heat content from the 10 kw electrical kilowatt reactors fed into the same area of the heat pump loop which is 30kw of thermal energy at 500 c  and that changes the systems to more of a functioning heat exchanger.

This takes care of humidity as well as all that is needed is more than one system inside the dome or any other shape that has internal volume of approximately 1,884,954 m^3 or greater.

#4 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Mars structure heating requirements » 2026-01-22 18:23:52

For a horizontal ground loop heat pump system on Mars, particularly for a large structure such as a 200 m diameter, 120 m tall habitat, the depth requirement for ground loops is significantly deeper than on Earth due to the need to escape massive daily surface temperature swings, radiation, and low soil thermal conductivity.

Recommended Minimum Depth:
Depth: At least 3 to 5 meters (approx. 10–16 feet) below the surface.

Reasoning: To achieve a stable temperature, loops must be placed below the diurnal and annual thermal skin depths, as the Martian regolith is a poor thermal conductor (approx. 0.039 W/m K).

Alternative: Given the scale of the structure, vertical borehole loops (100–300 ft deep) are often more efficient than horizontal trenches due to better heat exchange in deeper, more stable, and potentially denser material.

Key Factors for Mars Application:
Soil Properties: The soil is highly porous (60%) and acts as an insulator, requiring longer pipes and deeper, more extensive trenching for horizontal systems.

Thermal Stability: While surface temperatures can fluctuate wildly, a depth of 3-5 meters provides a relatively stable, though very cold, base temperature (approx. 220 K or -53°C).

Loop Type: Due to the 200m diameter, a slinky loop or vertical bore field would likely be necessary to manage the thermal load.

Safety: A depth of 3+ meters also provides necessary shielding for the loop system against surface radiation and potential meteoroid impacts

#5 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Asteroid/off-Earth mining » 2026-01-21 19:10:04

Asteroid electricity produced by a tether system primarily involves using long, conductive cables to generate power via electrodynamic interactions, similar to electrodynamic tethers (EDTs) used for orbital propulsion. While most research focuses on using tethers to maneuver asteroids for planetary defense or material collection, these systems can generate electrical energy as they move through interplanetary magnetic fields. 

Key Concepts in Tether-Based Asteroid Energy Generation Electrodynamic Power Generation: Similar to NASA's TEPCE experiment, a long, conducting wire (tether) moving through a magnetic field (e.g., in the solar wind) can generate a voltage, producing electricity that can power onboard instruments for missions.

E-Sail Technology: Electric solar wind sails use hundreds of kilometers of thin tether spun from a spacecraft, which can be powered by solar panels and, in reverse, potentially generate power from the solar wind's motion, with \(2,000\text{\ km}\) of tether potentially producing \(\sim 1\text{N}\) of force.

Asteroid Manipulation: Tethers are primarily proposed to attach a spacecraft to an asteroid to change its trajectory or to harness its kinetic energy, which, if integrated with an electrodynamic system, could provide power during long-term missions.

Energy Transfer: A "Momentum Exchange Electrodynamic Reboost" (MXER) tether system can use, and potentially generate, electricity to maintain its own kinetic energy while moving massive objects like asteroids or payloads, according to Centauri Dreams. Potential

Applications Long-term Exploration: Providing continuous, high-power energy for mining or scientific equipment on asteroids without relying on solar panels.

Propulsion and Navigation: Using the generated power to fuel electric propulsion systems to change the orbit of hazardous near-Earth objects.

Space Infrastructure: Tethered systems can serve as fuel-free, self-sustaining, or high-efficiency, long-term power sources for maneuvering, as discussed in this YouTube video. While electrodynamic tether electricity generation is proven in Earth orbit, its application to asteroid missions is largely in the theoretical or simulation stage for future space exploration

1. Mechanisms for Electricity Production
There are two primary theoretical ways a tether system can produce electricity from an asteroid:

Electrodynamic Induction: If an asteroid has a magnetic field or is moving through a plasma-rich environment (like a planetary magnetosphere), a conducting tether moving through these magnetic field lines induces an electromotive force (EMF). This converts the asteroid's orbital kinetic energy directly into electrical current.

Regenerative Braking (Momentum Exchange): Concepts like the Comet Hitchhiker use a tether to "harpoon" an asteroid during a flyby. As the spacecraft is pulled along, it applies a regenerative brake to the tether spool, slowing itself down while simultaneously recharging its onboard batteries by converting mechanical tension into electricity.

2. Theoretical Applications
Research and simulations as of 2026 suggest several use cases:

Asteroid De-Spinning: Large, rapidly rotating asteroids can be slowed down by deploying a tethered ballast mass. A portion of the rotational kinetic energy dissipated during this process can be harvested as electrical energy.

Propellantless Power for Mining: Future mining colonies could use tether systems to tap into an asteroid’s rotational energy to power drills or processing equipment without needing massive solar arrays or nuclear reactors.

Orbital Maneuvering: Tethered systems can exchange energy between two asteroids (a "dumbbell system") to change their trajectories for planetary defense or to move them into more accessible orbits for resource extraction.

3. Key Challenges and Limitations
Despite the potential, several hurdles remain:

Material Strength: Current tether materials must withstand extreme tension, especially when dealing with the massive kinetic energy of a moving asteroid.

Anchoring: Securing a tether to the granular, "rubble pile" surface of many asteroids is difficult, as bolts may pull out of the loose material.
Tether Stability: Tethered systems can become chaotic or oscillate violently, requiring advanced "passive damping" or active control to maintain stable power generation.

Magnetic Field Strength: Most asteroids have very weak magnetic fields compared to Earth, making simple electrodynamic induction less efficient unless they are passing near a large planet like Jupiter

#6 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » OpenFOAM » 2026-01-21 18:55:24

Solar thermal propulsion (STP) utilizing a hydrogen propellant, enhanced by heat pipe technology and leveraging high-performance, regeneratively cooled engine techniques (similar to the Merlin engine's regenerative cooling), is a highly efficient propulsion concept for in-space transportation. This approach, often characterized as a Solar Powered Rocket with Impulsive Thermal Engine (SPRITE), can achieve specific impulse (\(I_{sp}\)) values of 830–1000+ seconds, roughly twice that of the best chemical engines. Key Components &

Technology Hydrogen Propellant: Used for its low molecular weight, providing superior \(I_{sp}\) (800-1000+ seconds) compared to other propellants.

Heat Pipe/Thermal Storage: High-temperature sodium wicking or phase-change materials (PCM) are used to store solar energy, enabling the system to "coast" and accumulate energy, then release it for high-thrust, intermittent burns.

Materials: Refractory metals such as tungsten or rhenium are required to handle high temperatures (>2500K) and prevent chemical degradation from hot hydrogen.

"Merlin" Capabilities (Regenerative Cooling): Similar to the SpaceX Merlin engine, which uses regenerative cooling to handle extreme temperatures, solar thermal engines use the cold hydrogen propellant to cool the engine chamber and nozzle before it is heated and expelled. 

Performance Characteristics Thrust & Efficiency: While early designs produced around 8.9 N of thrust, advancements in high-temperature materials and concentrator technology are aimed at increasing performance.

Energy Collection: Uses deployable solar concentrators to gather solar energy over time, eliminating the need to have collectors pointed at the sun during all maneuvers.

Propellant Management: To handle cryogenic hydrogen, advanced zero-boil-off (ZBO) techniques are used to ensure long-term storability. 

Operational Advantages High Specific Impulse (\(I_{sp}\)): Over 800s to 1000s, significantly higher than chemical (\(I_{sp}\) ~300-450s).

No Hazardous Materials: Unlike nuclear thermal propulsion (NTP), solar thermal systems are generally non-toxic and safer to operate.High-

Thrust Capability: The use of energy storage/impulsive thermal engines allows for high-thrust maneuvers suitable for orbital transfers (e.g., LEO to GEO in ~1 month).

Versatility: The system is ideal for in-space tugs, utilizing on-orbit refueling or potentially harvested water/hydrogen as propellant. Current research, such as the NASA-supported SPRITE project, is focused on reducing the total wet mass of these vehicles to below 200 kg while maximizing propellant efficiency

Solar thermal propulsion (STP) using hydrogen heat pipes represents a high-efficiency alternative to traditional chemical engines like SpaceX's Merlin. While STP systems excel in fuel efficiency (Isp), they operate at vastly different scales than the high-thrust Merlin engines used for heavy lifting.

1. Comparative Capabilities (STP vs. Merlin)
As of 2026, experimental STP systems are achieving performance metrics that surpass the efficiency of Merlin engines while trailing significantly in raw power.

Specific Impulse (Efficiency): STP systems such as the SPRITE (Solar Powered Rocket with Impulsive Thermal Engine) achieve an Isp of ~830–860 seconds. Advanced designs using carbide materials aim for >1,000 seconds. In contrast, the Merlin 1D vacuum engine has an Isp of ~348 seconds.

Thrust-to-Weight Ratio: The Merlin 1D holds a world record thrust-to-weight ratio of >150. While STP systems like SPRITE are designed for high thrust-to-weight relative to other solar concepts, they generally produce low absolute thrust (e.g., 8.9 N) suitable for orbital transfers rather than Earth-to-orbit launches.
Mission Utility: STP is primarily targeted for upper-stage maneuvers, such as moving payloads from LEO to GEO or the Moon, where high efficiency over long durations is more valuable than the immediate raw thrust required by first-stage engines like the Merlin.

2. Role of Hydrogen Heat Pipes in 2026
In 2026, hydrogen heat pipes are critical for thermal management in these high-temperature systems:

Thermal Transport: Heat pipes function as "thermal superconductors," using phase-change fluids to move massive heat loads from solar concentrators to the engine's absorber cavity with minimal temperature drops.

System Enhancement: Recent developments show that integrating parabolic reflectors with advanced heat pipes can increase local temperatures by over 30%, significantly improving the melting performance of phase-change materials used for energy storage.

Propellant Management: Solar thermal rockets utilize hot hydrogen as a propellant because its low molecular weight allows for much higher exhaust velocities than the kerosene/oxygen mix used in Merlin engines.

3. Current Milestones (2025–2026)

Full-Scale Tests: In late 2025, companies like Portal Space Systems validated STP architectures at temperatures of 1,500°C (2,700°F) using electrical induction to simulate solar power, with full-scale demonstration missions scheduled for 2026.

Advanced Materials: Research in 2026 continues to focus on refractory metals (tungsten, rhenium) and high-temperature carbides to withstand the 2,500K+ environments required for efficient hydrogen heating

#7 Re: Meta New Mars » Housekeeping » 2026-01-21 18:20:02

WE will see 3 pothole in the next run due to duplicate topic.

#8 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » OpenFOAM » 2026-01-21 15:34:07

I was hoping that this had been read already but here it is About OpenFOAM

The OpenFOAM Foundation

A solar thermal optical plane space vessel uses focused sunlight via large mirrors/concentrators, often with optical fibers, to heat a propellant (like hydrogen) to extreme temperatures, creating thrust, offering high efficiency (high specific impulse) for orbit changes, unlike solar sails that use light pressure, with concepts like Portal Space Systems' Supernova aiming for high maneuverability for defense/service, building on NASA's research for advanced solar propulsion systems.
Core Concepts
Solar Thermal Propulsion (STP): Captures solar energy with large mirrors (concentrators) and focuses it onto a heat exchanger/absorber, heating a propellant to generate thrust, achieving higher efficiency than chemical rockets.
Optical Waveguides: Some designs use optical fibers to transmit concentrated solar energy from the collector to the engine, allowing for more flexible system designs.
Optical Plane: Refers to the precise optical systems (mirrors, lenses) used to concentrate sunlight and potentially for imaging/sensing, requiring high-temperature materials and stability.
Key Components & Technologies
Concentrators: Large, often inflatable mirrors that focus sunlight.
Absorber/Heat Exchanger: Receives concentrated solar energy and heats the propellant.
Propellant: Typically hydrogen, heated to over 2500K, sometimes over 3000K with advanced materials.
Materials: Requires high-temperature refractory metals (tungsten, rhenium) or carbides to withstand extreme heat.
Optical Structures: Precision-built composite structures for stability in imaging and concentrating systems, used in telescopes and rovers.
Applications & Examples
Upper Stages: Ideal for moving payloads from Low Earth Orbit (LEO) to higher orbits or Earth escape.
Small Satellites: Enables orbit changes and long-duration missions with high delta-V.
Portal Supernova: A current project using solar thermal propulsion for high-delta-V, in-orbit refueling, and autonomous drone swarms.
NASA Research: Historically studied by NASA Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) and Sandia National Labs for advanced propulsion.
Contrast with Solar Sails
Solar Sails: Use direct photon pressure from sunlight on large sails, no propellant needed (e.g., IKAROS, LightSail-2).
Solar Thermal: Heats a propellant for rocket thrust; distinct from solar sails but both use solar energy for propulsion

Solar Thermal Propulsion for Small Spacecraft

PROPELLING INTERPLANETARY SPACECRAFT UTILIZING WATER-STEAM

#9 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » What Are The Best Settlement Sites on Mars? » 2026-01-20 18:44:09

Another 3D printable materials
Martian concrete is gypsum sand available on the Martian surface. Thermal dehydration converts the gypsum to plaster and water, two of the three ingredients necessary for concrete. A concrete 3D printer tunes the proportion of those materials, along with Martian sand and/or stone, to produce mix designs.

Gypsum on Mars is found in large dune fields near the North Pole (Olympia Undae), indicating past liquid water, and in smaller deposits like veins in Gale Crater (Curiosity rover), showing ancient lake environments. It's common in various locations, including fracture fillings and sediments, often alongside other sulfates like bassanite and anhydrite, pointing to diverse past watery conditions.
Key Locations:
Olympia Undae (North Polar Region): The largest known Martian gypsum deposit, found in extensive sand seas near the North Polar Cap, formed during wetter periods.
Gale Crater (Curiosity Rover): Gypsum veins and deposits have been identified in areas like Yellowknife Bay, evidence of an ancient lake system.
Juventae Chasma: Features named "Gypsum Hills" also indicate the mineral's presence.
Formation & Significance:
Requires Liquid Water: Gypsum (calcium sulfate dihydrate) forms in the presence of liquid water, confirming past warmer, wetter Martian environments.
Evidence of Ancient Water: Its presence in dunes suggests water emerged from melting polar deposits, while its occurrence in craters points to ancient lakes.
Mineral Associations: Often found with bassanite and anhydrite, indicating different hydration states or dehydration processes on the cold, dry planet.
Detection Methods:
Orbital Spectrometers: Instruments like OMEGA (Mars Express) and CRISM (MRO) detected broad sulfate signatures, including gypsum, from orbit.
Rover Instruments: The Curiosity rover's CheMin instrument confirmed gypsum's presence via X-ray diffraction, allowing for detailed mineral analysis

#10 Re: Meta New Mars » kbd512 Postings » 2026-01-20 18:30:48

Checking to see what we still need?

#12 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » WIKI Project Designing for Mars » 2026-01-20 16:30:39

Isogrid stainless steel manufacturing for Mars habitats leverages additive manufacturing (3D printing) with in-situ resources (ISRU), like Martian iron ore, to create strong, lightweight panels for structural support, potentially using techniques like Directed Energy Deposition (DED) for metal alloys, reducing Earth launch mass by printing parts on-site. This approach, focusing on robotic construction and modular designs with materials like regolith or steel powder, aims to enable autonomous habitat creation and repair, enhancing mission robustness and self-sufficiency for long-term Martian bases.
How it works
Material Sourcing: Martian iron ore (regolith) can be processed to create steel powder, replacing imported materials.
Additive Manufacturing: DED 3D printing is used to build intricate isogrid structures, fusing metal powder layer by layer.
In-Situ Production: Robots build panels autonomously on Mars, creating walls and components for habitats.
Gradient Alloys: Researchers are exploring gradient alloys, like transitioning from Invar to stainless steel, for specific properties like thermal expansion.
Benefits for Mars habitats
Reduced Mass: Eliminates the need to launch heavy building materials from Earth, lowering costs.
Autonomous Construction: Robots can build habitats before crew arrival, increasing safety and efficiency.
Enhanced Reliability: On-site manufacturing allows for creating spare parts, supporting self-repair and growth.
Structural Efficiency: Isogrids provide high strength-to-weight, ideal for pressurized environments.
Key technologies & concepts
ISRU (In-Situ Resource Utilization): Using local Martian materials.
DED (Directed Energy Deposition): A 3D printing method for metals.
Robotic Construction: Autonomous assembly and printing.
Modular Design: For easier maintenance and replacement of components.
Current Status & Future
NASA and partners are actively researching and prototyping these methods, with testbeds like Mars Dune Alpha demonstrating 3D-printed habitats and technologies for ISRU construction showing high Technology Readiness Levels (TRLs) for future mission

#13 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » WIKI Project Designing for Mars » 2026-01-20 16:30:26

Structural metal methods for possible use with structures on mars.

The Orion capsule features an aluminum isogrid/orthogrid structure designed for maximum strength-to-weight efficiency, featuring complex machining, with specific structural requirements including:
Grid Structure: The structure consists of machined aluminum panels (isogrid or orthogrid), which are assembled into rings for the pressurized crew cabin and other sections.
Skin/Web Thickness: Analysis of similar, high-strength aerospace applications indicates skin pocket thickness is driven by buckling requirements during re-entry. While not providing a single definitive number for the entire capsule, typical aerospace isogrid designs often involve thin skins (e.g., < 0.04 inches/1.0 mm) with significantly thicker integral ribs (sometimes up to 8mm or more, or "> 0.32 inch") for reinforcement.
Weldland Thickness: In structural analyses of similar metallic structures, weldlands (areas where panels are welded together) are designed with a minimum thickness of 0.25 inches to maintain structural integrity.
Manufacturing Tolerances: The panels are precision-machined, with components for the SLS/Orion system (like the adapter) featuring a "lightweight" design to reduce weight while preserving structural integrity, as noted in the manufacturing of the Orion Stage Adapter.
The orthogrid web thickness is primarily determined by buckling stability and strength requirements during high-load scenarios

#14 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » What Are The Best Settlement Sites on Mars? » 2026-01-19 14:29:01

NASA takes years, often decades, to plan Mars missions, developing concepts, technologies (like the Artemis program for lunar practice), and identifying locations through extensive studies, with initial human missions aimed for the late 2030s, building on learning from robotic explorers and lunar experiences for exploration and science goals. The decision process involves long-term strategic planning, refining objectives, and overcoming massive technical hurdles over many years before a specific mission is finalized.

Key Factors & Timelines:
Long-Term Vision: NASA's strategy uses the Moon (Artemis Program) as a testbed for deep space operations, with plans stretching over 20 years to prepare for Mars.

Technology Development: Years are spent developing crucial systems for life support, propulsion, and power, with breakthroughs needed before missions can launch.

Mission Formulation: Identifying specific locations and scientific goals involves extensive study and planning, with rough outlines for crewed missions developed years in advance.

Current Goals: NASA aims to send humans to Mars in the 2030s, using lessons from Artemis to inform these future deep-space endeavors.

In essence, the "how many years" isn't a fixed number but a multi-decade commitment, evolving from initial ideas to concrete plans, with decisions on specific locations and 'whys' refined over time as technology and understanding advance.

The lack of information about the topography, climate, environment, landmass, and gravity on the red planet made it difficult to contemplate building construction solutions. The availability of resources such as water and fossil fuels on Mars is questionable because no evidence of human civilization has been found on the planet to date.

Additionally, transporting building materials and labor from earth to mars would be expensive because of the heavy fuel consumption by spaceships. So, exploring a new set of locally-available materials on mars seems like a viable solution to help reduce the stress on earth’s resources. With this intent, professionals such as architects, scientists, and geospatial experts collaborated to map the feasibility of Martian resources to be used as building materials.

2-Decisions.png?w=1476&ssl=1

#15 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » What Are The Best Settlement Sites on Mars? » 2026-01-19 13:30:23

We could pick any location that we can land but if the resource for building are not there pick any location will cause failure.

Not only must the building resource must be present but easy for extraction and water.
Whether its basalt, Iron, or any other ore at high enough concentration.

Sands of basalt would make it easier to process but that is just one material to construct with.

Basalt sand is widespread on Mars, forming vast dark dunes, especially around the North Polar erg (Olympia Undae), where winds sculpt them into active patterns, and in regions like Meridiani Planum (seen by Opportunity) and near volcanoes like Syrtis Major, often appearing dark or blueish due to mineral composition, contrasting with the reddish dust and sometimes mixed with gypsum.

Key Locations & Features:
North Polar Region (Olympia Undae): A massive ring of basaltic (and some gypsum) sand dunes, some over 100 feet high, showing active movement and sublimation-driven "tree-like" streaks.
Meridiani Planum: Explored by the Opportunity rover, this area features basaltic sand grains, sometimes forming spherical aggregates, with distinct dark patches.
Syrtis Major: A large volcanic region where dark basaltic sand and rock are prominent, showcasing volcanic origins for the sand.
Impact Craters: Many craters expose underlying basalt layers, providing sources for sand that gets reworked by wind.

Characteristics:
Color: Dark, often appearing black or bluish in images due to volcanic minerals like olivine.
Formation: Created from volcanic eruptions and mechanical weathering, then shaped by wind (aeolian processes).
Activity: Dunes are very active, shifting significantly over time, influenced by seasonal frost and dry ice sublimation.

How it's Found:
Orbital imagery (like NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) and its HiRISE camera) reveals large dune fields.
Rovers (Curiosity, Opportunity) analyze surface sands up close, confirming their basaltic composition

If you want to use iron for steel and for stainless you have a different list of locations where it is know to be.

High-Concentration Iron Locations on Mars Meridiani Planum: Known for large, concentrated deposits of gray, crystalline hematite (\(Fe_{2}O_{3}\)), particularly small spherules known as "blueberries".

Valles Marineris & Chaos Terrains: These areas show signs of ancient water activity that concentrated iron oxides.

Northern Lowlands (Utopia/Amazonis Planitia): Identified by orbital gamma-ray spectrometers as having the highest concentrations of surface iron.

Impact Craters (Southern Highlands): High-grade ore systems likely exist in the subsurface, exposed by large crater impacts.

Meteorites: Nickel-iron meteorites are relatively common on the surface, offering a source of high-grade, pre-reduced iron that does not require smelting. 

#17 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » WIKI Project Designing for Mars » 2026-01-19 06:52:12

Establishing a 1,000-person colony on Mars requires a significant, dedicated gym facility—estimated at 3,000–5,000 square meters—to mitigate muscle atrophy and bone density loss in 38% gravity. Given the high-intensity daily exercise requirements (equivalent to 2+ hours per person on the ISS), this facility would likely consist of multiple, specialized pressurized structures rather than a single room.
Gym Facility Requirements (1,000 Personnel)
Total Area: ~3,000–5,000 square meters (based on 3–5 sq/m per person for a "station" or commercial standard).
Equipment Density: Roughly 10–30 sq/ft (1–3 sq/m) per piece of equipment for comfort, or 20–50 sq/ft for strength training.
Core Equipment: Advanced Resistive Exercise Device (ARED) for strength, Treadmill 2 (T2) with vibration isolation for running, and Cycle Ergometer (CEVIS) for cardio.
Design Consideration: The facility should be part of a larger pressurized "city" complex, likely utilizing 3D-printed Martian concrete domes or inflatable modules, according to NASA-sponsored habitat studies.
Key Design Elements for Mars Gyms
Gravity Countermeasures: Because Mars has lower gravity, the equipment must allow for daily, high-intensity workouts to prevent long-term health degradation.
Equipment Type: Compact, multi-use devices like the ROCKY (Resistive Overload Combined with Kinetic Yo-Yo) device are necessary to save space.
Psychological Benefit: Beyond physical health, dedicated gym space is essential for mental well-being and reducing the feeling of being "cooped up".
Construction: The gym area would be built using 3D-printed regolith (Martian soil) structures, which provide necessary shielding against radiation.
Space Context & Comparisons
ISS: Current gym equipment for 3-6 crew members takes up roughly 850 cubic feet.
CHAPEA (Mars Simulation): A 1,700-square-foot habitat includes a dedicated, yet small, area for fitness.
Starship Transport: A 100-person transport ship is designed with a volume of roughly 1,000+ cubic meters, with a smaller portion allocated for exercise.
For a 1,000-person colony, the gym would not be a single room, but a large, multi-zone facility, potentially divided into specialized areas for cardio, free weights, and rehabilitation

#18 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » KBD512 Biosphere structure of cast basalt » 2026-01-19 06:38:53

Please start a wiki for all collected final design content.
we will use these discussions as the companion to gather questions to fill in content.

#19 Re: Not So Free Chat » Submarines general topic » 2026-01-19 06:10:51

internal images to show how pipes, electrical and more are open to all within for base of mars construction.

https://pigboats.com/index.php?title=S- … cont_2.jpg


https://pigboats.com/index.php?title=S- … otor_2.jpg

Things have not changed all that much from these old images.

#20 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Ring Habitat on Mars Doughnut Torus » 2026-01-19 06:02:32

KBD512 needs to start the wiki document for constructing structure for a 1,000 crewed on Mars station to place all items as decided with in.

Just a reminder Calliban's dome has varied in population but the starting number is 1000 could only support 350 crew with life support for the size of of the 200m diameter parabolic 120m tall with probably 50 meters deep to house greenhouse, waste recovery and other such thing.

Deciding on shape structure is as you can see still is in concept.

Internal support is still unknown but if we are using submarine and aircraft construction for internal spaces then this is not a home style for civilians.

locations for Basalt and for Iron to make steel or stainless with


If we go with stainless steel ISOGRID then where is the source other than the build up of empty unused starship cargo ship which is in the neighborhood of 70MT of the ships hull and more. Other items can be removed and set aside for building.

The facts of mars for plumbing are going to be below the structures floor but inside the pressurized area hull of 0.1 M with depth of the floor depends on materials and where there is more floors above. ceiling are 2 meters tall with lighting 0.05M, electrical 0.05M, HAVC 0.3m set aside to keep these out of the way of the people with in. This layout repeats for the next and so on.

That means the proposed 125m^3 of pressurized volume for each family of 4 is a rectangle of 2.5 m tall with 5 m wide x 10 m long.

1,000 crew / 4 means 250 such rooms but that is not all of the internal requirement as hall ways are need on both side of these so that is 2.5 M x 1 M wide x 2 x 250 x 10 M = 62,500 cubic meter for living space regardless of shape for sleeping quarters.


Greenhouse volume for 1,000 need per single person is 2m x 4m x5m = 40 cubic meter x 1,000 = 40,000 cubic m volume to add to the sleeping quarters.

running total is 62,500 x 40,000 = 102,500 cubic meters

Volume of space still not complete


other things to consider are rest rooms, showers and Private Hygiene: ? sq meters per crew. or this not in the family room but in a common area

Health/Medical Area: 23-28 sq meters per crew patient bed for monitoring, leave space for all side of bed

surgery suite and triage room for emergency care  ?

4 lights for each room but how many outlets for each as they may have a drop down desk area ?

outside item:
NASA indicates 10kw per crew for all power needs for safety but I think that is not counting things for building or for mining
1,000 x 10 kw = 10 Meg watt supply hopefully crews will know enough to shut stuff off. This does sound like over kill of capability.

So far only KRUSTY and scaled up versions are known to be going to Mars. for 10kw there is 30 kw of thermal that must be dissipated into the mars air or soils.


current wiki for human waste management AI content plus we have the starship fuel tanks to make use of for this purpose.
A 4-person crew can generate up to 2,500 kg of waste in a one-year mission.
A 3-year, 8-person crew is projected to generate roughly 12,600 kg of inorganic waste alone.


Exercise/Equipment: have 2 ways to think of is this the a consolidated gym are like a planet fitness
Gym Facility Requirements (1,000 Personnel)
Total Area: ~3,000–5,000 square meters (based on 3–5 sq/m per person for a "station" or commercial standard).
Equipment Density: Roughly 10–30 sq/ft (1–3 sq/m) per piece of equipment for comfort, or 20–50 sq/ft for strength training.

Structure still requires airlocks to most likely be shipped to the site before construction starts.

Building a large-scale stainless steel isogrid dome on Mars to house 1,000 crew members requires an industrial-scale, multi-decade construction effort, focusing on in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) to minimize the immense cost of transporting materials from Earth.

Structural Design and Engineering Isogrid Structure: An isogrid—a triangular pattern of ribs—provides high stiffness-to-weight ratios, ideal for resisting the high tensile stresses of a pressurized dome against the near-vacuum of Mars.

Dome Sizing: To house 1,000 people, the structure would likely need to be a large, multi-hectare habitat, similar to "mega dome" concepts.

Dimensions: A 20-meter high, 24mm thick steel plate wall, bolstered by vertical stringers, can withstand internal pressure.

Anchoring: Large domes create immense upward pressure (approx. 10 tonnes per \(m^{2}\)). The dome must be anchored deeply into the ground, likely using the weight of Martian regolith.

Construction Process and Materials Stainless Steel Sourcing: Stainless steel components can be fabricated on-site. Using locally sourced materials requires 40-50 years of development, involving heavy mining and smelting, with a 1-meter deep, 8x8 km pit of regolith necessary for material to sustain a large population's infrastructure.

Fabrication: Panels would be manufactured on Mars and welded in place to create a pressure-tight, airtight structure.

Prefabrication Limits: Due to transport constraints, domes cannot be brought in one piece; they must be constructed using modular, assembled components.

Protection: The steel shell must be shielded from radiation and micrometeoroids, typically by covering it with 1–3 meters of compacted Martian regolith.

Challenges and Considerations Atmospheric Pressure: The 78,000 tonnes of force on a 100-meter dome requires massive, specialized structural engineering.

Surface Conditions: Extreme cold and dust storms will hinder construction, requiring durable, automated robotic equipment.

Alternative Approaches: While steel is possible, some experts suggest that 3D-printed regolith, ice, or carbon fiber might be more efficient in terms of weight and material, as bringing steel from Earth is too costly.

Redundancy: To prevent single-point failures, the habitat should consist of multiple interconnected domes rather than one single, massive structure

Stainless steel isogrid dome construction on Mars offers a robust method for creating large-volume, pressurized habitats, leveraging high-strength, lightweight, and durable materials that can be transported from Earth or potentially manufactured on-site. Isogrid structures (triangular, lattice-reinforced, or sandwich panels) are engineered for maximum stiffness, providing the necessary pressure vessel strength to withstand the high-pressure differential (approx. 14.6 PSI) between a breathable, pressurized interior and the near-vacuum, low-pressure (0.1 PSI) Martian environment.
Key Aspects of Stainless Steel Isogrid Dome Construction on Mars
Structural Integrity: Isogrid designs, often used in aerospace for their exceptional strength-to-weight ratio, are considered for large domes to manage the massive tension loads on the dome surface. These designs use stiffeners to prevent the panels from "ballooning".
Material Advantages: Stainless steel is deemed more cost-effective to produce and, for certain applications, more reliable than inflatable alternatives. SpaceX, for instance, has developed technologies to work with stainless steel for large pressure vessels.
Construction Process:
Modular Assembly: Domes would likely be constructed from smaller, manageable panels rather than being sent as one large unit, given cargo constraints (e.g., SpaceX's 12m diameter limit).
Welding and Joining: Electron beam welding or similar advanced, automated techniques would be used to join panels, taking advantage of the vacuum of space (or, by extension, the Martian atmosphere) for high-quality welds.
Foundations: The structure would likely be anchored firmly into the Martian regolith to withstand internal pressures and environmental stressors.
Environmental Protection: While the steel provides the pressure vessel, additional layers are needed for radiation shielding and to handle the extreme temperature differences (around -63°C average).
Regolith Shielding: Covering the dome with 3–5 meters of local soil (regolith) is proposed to protect against high radiation levels and micrometeoroid impacts.
Hybrid Designs: Using a "thermos" style, with an inner pressurized steel hull and an outer shell, is a potential design to manage thermal and structural loads simultaneously.
Potential Challenges:
Massive Pressure Load: A large, unburied dome would need to be extremely heavy to prevent it from bursting. This requires significant anchoring and material strength.
Transport Costs: Moving large amounts of steel from Earth is expensive, necessitating, in the long term, on-site, in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) to create construction materials.
Stainless steel isogrid domes are a viable, high-tech option, often discussed in parallel with other techniques like 3D-printed ice habitats or underground, excavated, or "buried," in-situ, "dome-on-a-crater" concepts

Constructing a stainless steel isogrid dome on Mars to maintain an internal atmosphere of 0.5 bar (approx. 7.25 psi, similar to Apollo-era spacecraft) is an engineered solution designed to balance high structural efficiency with the need to withstand intense internal tensile stress. At this pressure, the dome is primarily a pressure vessel, requiring superior anchorage to prevent it from lifting or buckling.

1. Structural Design & Advantages (Isogrid)
An isogrid structure—a triangular, lattice-like reinforcement on the interior of the skin—is ideal for a Mars dome because it offers high bending stiffness with minimal material weight.
Tensile Strength: Because the 0.5 bar internal pressure far exceeds the 0.006 bar external pressure, the dome is under constant, significant tension. Isogrid structures efficiently manage these hoop stresses.
Material Selection: Stainless steel is favored for its high strength-to-weight ratio, ease of welding/prefabrication on-site, and high cryogenic strength at low temperatures.
Shape Optimization: While geodomes are common, low-pressure Mars environments might favor "egg-like" or flatter shell geometries to better distribute the internal pressure loads.

2. Construction Methodology on Mars
Constructing such a structure requires automated, robotic assistance to handle hazardous, low-pressure, and cold conditions.
Prefabrication and Welding: Stainless steel panels can be pre-manufactured on Earth and transported, then welded together on-site. Welding is considered feasible for stainless steel compared to other materials like carbon fiber.
Anchorage: The dome must be heavily anchored to the Martian surface to prevent it from lifting off, requiring foundation engineering or covering the dome with several meters of regolith (soil) for ballast and radiation shielding.
In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU): Long-term construction can leverage ISRU by producing steel on Mars using local iron oxide and carbon, although this is a long-term goal.

3. Key Challenges at 0.5 Bar
Pressure Management: The dome must maintain its structural integrity under constant outward pressure, necessitating robust sealing against air loss.
Material Embrittlement: Although stainless steel has good low-temperature properties, it must be carefully selected to avoid becoming brittle in extreme cold.
Dust Accumulation: Abrasive Martian dust can settle on the dome, reducing solar gain and requiring maintenance.
Radiation Protection: While 0.5 bar of pressure provides some, it is insufficient to block harmful cosmic radiation; therefore, a covering of regolith is often necessary.

4. Comparison with Alternatives
vs. Rigid Domes: Stainless steel isogrid provides superior strength over standard rigid domes but is heavier to transport.
vs. Inflatable Domes: While lighter, inflatable structures (like the NASA Ice Home concept) require thicker insulation layers to prevent freezing and, often, a protective outer shell.
vs. Cut-and-Cover: Using buried or "cut and cover" techniques is often preferred for long-term, high-pressure habitation to minimize tension, whereas isogrid domes are excellent for high-volume work/living spaces.
A 0.5 bar environment represents a balance between the high cost of maintaining a 1-bar Earth-like atmosphere and the metabolic needs of humans, making it a viable, high-efficiency compromise for Martian habitation

Yes, an isogrid structure made from flat stainless steel sheets is a viable concept for large Martian habitats, offering high strength-to-weight with triangular ribs from single sheets, ideal for withstanding Martian pressure/loads while being potentially manufacturable (even 3D printed) in-situ or from pre-fab, balancing lightweight needs with Mars's harsh environment, though material processing and thermal swings remain key challenges.
Why Isogrids Work for Mars:
Strength & Lightness: Isogrids, essentially thin skins with stiffening ribs (often triangular), provide high structural stiffness and strength while minimizing mass, crucial for space structures.
Single-Sheet Fabrication: They can be machined or printed from single sheets, reducing complex assembly and potential leak points compared to honeycomb structures.
Isotropic Properties: The triangular pattern makes them behave like an isotropic material (same properties in all directions), offering uniform performance.
Material Adaptability: While traditionally metal, new additive manufacturing allows printing composite isogrids, and stainless steel offers durability.
Stainless Steel & Mars:
Durability: Stainless steel offers excellent resistance to corrosion and extreme temperatures, making it suitable for the harsh Martian environment.
Manufacturability: While requiring significant energy, it's a known material, and techniques like additive manufacturing (3D printing) are being explored for creating these structures on Mars using local resources or brought materials.
Challenges & Solutions:
Thermal Swings: Extreme temperature variations on Mars (e.g., 20°C to -73°C) can affect material adhesion and performance, requiring software/design solutions.
In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU): Processing Martian regolith or imported steel into printable/formable sheets for these structures is a major engineering hurdle.
Habitat Design: Integrating isogrid panels with other systems (like regolith shielding for radiation) and ensuring airtightness for large volumes remains complex.
In essence, an isogrid made from flat stainless steel sheets is a strong structural choice, but its practical application on Mars hinges on advanced manufacturing and material science to overcome thermal and processing challenges

#21 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Ring Habitat on Mars Doughnut Torus » 2026-01-18 20:10:44

We launched the evening with discussions of kbd512's vision of a ring/dome habitat

SpaceNut joined  in with numerous suggestions for materials and procedures.

We settled on a population to serve: 1000

That is a nice round number to work with.  SpaceNut agreed to consult his AI friends to see if any of them can work out the requirements for all the equipment needed to sustain that population.

We are in need of fresh water and sewerage systems, and the equipment to recover fresh water from the sewerage.

SpaceNut is in an industry that deals with humans in closed life support environments.

Hopefully he will be able to help kbd512 size the complex.

Kbd512 gave us an expectation that some support systems would be inside the building and some outside.

To build for 1,000 a dome with isogrid structure of mars materials to use and do develop of stainless insitu materials is going to be a 40 year plus plan involving heavy mining and smelting, with a 1-meter deep, 8x8 km pit of regolith necessary for material to sustain a large population's infrastructure.

Leaving even more time for getting the cast basalt processing for insertion into the grid.

#23 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » WIKI Project Designing for Mars » 2026-01-18 19:55:53

make a building that can house 1,000 crew is just a multiplier for what needs to be setup for all space requires from power, life support, greenhouse, medical care, ect these are not established for mars or for the moon in there entirety.

Picking any number to support any person is going to fail for any construction when quotative numbers are not proven.

That's like saying you only need 8 gallons of water to drink for the whole mission with none on the other end once you are there.

Ignoring facts of who, what, where, when and more 20 questions are blank.

The facts of mars for plumbing are going to be below the structures floor but inside the pressurized area hull of 0.1 M with depth of the floor depends on materials and where there is more floors above. ceiling are 2 meters tall with lighting 0.05M, electrical 0.05M, HAVC 0.3m set aside to keep these out of the way of the people with in. This layout repeats for the next and so on.

That means the proposed 125m³ per pressurized volume for each family of 4 is a rectangle of 2.5 m tall with 5 m wide x 10 m long.


1,000 crew / 4 means 250 such rooms but that is not all of the internal requirement as hall ways are need on both side of these so that is 2.5 M x 1 M wide x 2 x 250 x 10 M = 62,500 cubic meter for living space regardless of shape for sleeping quarters.

Private Hygiene: 25 m³  per crew. 2.5 m x 2.5 m x 4 m

Exercise/Equipment: 9 m³   per crew.

Health/Medical Area:  per crew. For long-term, permanent, or expanding settlements, the available volume can increase through local construction (e.g., using regolith for radiation shielding), but the initial landing, transit, and surface habitats will likely operate close to the minimum 25 m³/person requirement with total are for the medical suite 4645 to a max of 9290 square meters

#24 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » KBD512 Biosphere structure of cast basalt » 2026-01-18 19:54:29

Isogrid technology, which involves creating rigid, lightweight triangular-stiffened structures, is a critical technique for designing space-hardened habitats and shells on Mars. While specific "plug-and-play" software labeled "Isogrid Maker for Mars" does not exist, aerospace and structural engineers use several advanced CAD and simulation tools to model these, often utilizing additive manufacturing (3D printing) for implementation.
Key Software and Modeling Techniques for Mars Domes:
Autodesk Fusion 360: Used for parametric modeling of isogrid structures. It allows engineers to create, test, and adapt the geometry of triangular ribs, which is critical for optimization.
Continuous Composites (CF3D): NASA-selected technology that uses advanced robotics to print continuous carbon fiber in isogrid rib patterns for space applications.
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) Software: Tools like ANSYS or NASTRAN are used to simulate the structural loads (internal pressure vs. external atmosphere) on isogrid domes to ensure they can withstand Martian conditions.
Roboze One+400: A 3D printer specifically used in research for producing high-performance, lightweight isogrid structures.
Geodesic Dome Calculators: For the basic geometry of polyhedral domes, tools that calculate chord factors and strut lengths are used.
Applications on Mars:
3D Printed Shells: Research suggests using 3D-printable inner spherical shells and outer parabolic domes to protect habitats from the Martian climate.
Regolith Manipulation: Techniques like sintering or microwave melting of Martian regolith are planned for creating geodesic domes.
Structural Efficiency: Isogrid designs are used to minimize mass while maximizing pressure resistance, necessary for transporting materials from Earth or using indigenous resources.
Commonly Used Tools:
CAD: Autodesk Fusion 360, SolidWorks, CATIA.
Analysis: ANSYS, Abaqus, Altair HyperWorks.
Manufacturing: Specialized 3D printing software (slicers for robotic arms).
These tools are part of a broader approach to designing and testing Martian habitat structures, which must be both lightweight for transit and rigid enough to handle the 101 kPa pressure differential on Mars

#25 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Ring Habitat on Mars Doughnut Torus » 2026-01-18 19:53:20

Isogrid technology, which involves creating rigid, lightweight triangular-stiffened structures, is a critical technique for designing space-hardened habitats and shells on Mars. While specific "plug-and-play" software labeled "Isogrid Maker for Mars" does not exist, aerospace and structural engineers use several advanced CAD and simulation tools to model these, often utilizing additive manufacturing (3D printing) for implementation.
Key Software and Modeling Techniques for Mars Domes:
Autodesk Fusion 360: Used for parametric modeling of isogrid structures. It allows engineers to create, test, and adapt the geometry of triangular ribs, which is critical for optimization.
Continuous Composites (CF3D): NASA-selected technology that uses advanced robotics to print continuous carbon fiber in isogrid rib patterns for space applications.
Finite Element Analysis (FEA) Software: Tools like ANSYS or NASTRAN are used to simulate the structural loads (internal pressure vs. external atmosphere) on isogrid domes to ensure they can withstand Martian conditions.
Roboze One+400: A 3D printer specifically used in research for producing high-performance, lightweight isogrid structures.
Geodesic Dome Calculators: For the basic geometry of polyhedral domes, tools that calculate chord factors and strut lengths are used.
Applications on Mars:
3D Printed Shells: Research suggests using 3D-printable inner spherical shells and outer parabolic domes to protect habitats from the Martian climate.
Regolith Manipulation: Techniques like sintering or microwave melting of Martian regolith are planned for creating geodesic domes.
Structural Efficiency: Isogrid designs are used to minimize mass while maximizing pressure resistance, necessary for transporting materials from Earth or using indigenous resources.
Commonly Used Tools:
CAD: Autodesk Fusion 360, SolidWorks, CATIA.
Analysis: ANSYS, Abaqus, Altair HyperWorks.
Manufacturing: Specialized 3D printing software (slicers for robotic arms).
These tools are part of a broader approach to designing and testing Martian habitat structures, which must be both lightweight for transit and rigid enough to handle the 101 kPa pressure differential on Mars

These are the quick google of software to use in a isogrid construction.

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