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Yes. I think it will speed up construction and allow for more accurate working. You can also operate 24/7 if you wish with artificial lighting.
So we are making some sort of large temporary structure to be able to build the permanent structure within?
Which when we pressurize to be able to build within and without space suits is that what is trying to be accomplished?
Is this really what the intended purpose is?
Let's Go to Mars...Google on: Fast Track to Mars blogspot.com
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Sorry Louis. I can't see this idea being practical. Your temporary construction hab will take more construction than it is worth. We should think about making it permanent if we need it, or doing our construction in the open. Lighting and radiant heaters can be mounted on towers if you wish to work late.
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Here on the Earth, we don't take the machine shop to the jobsite. We have the components fabricated where most convenient and haul them where they are needed.
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The only habitats on earth that are built inside are modular homes and I sort of think that Lious is thinking that direction which only makes sense if that structure is made permanent for that purpose. Making it a permanent structure then has merit for other habitats to be moved out on a trailer to the new site which has been dug as previously discussed and then lowered off the trailer into the trenched hole to which is then filled back in to hold down the newly placed home. Then its a matter of running power and other such items as needed to that new habitat before occupying it.
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This first construction will be of great benefit to man as we stay on mars and for future crews that come.
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Sure this is an automated unit that can make more living space for man to use but at what mass expense and when would we send it.
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Lunar Outpost eyes up first-mover advantage for moon markets
https://ph.news.yahoo.com/lunar-outpost … 15456.html
An Experimental Surgical Robot Is Headed to The International Space Station
https://www.sciencealert.com/a-remote-s … ce-station
What is ISRU, and How Will it Help Human Space Exploration?
https://www.universetoday.com/157365/wh … ploration/
As Artemis 1 prepares for its maiden launch with the goal of putting astronauts back on the Moon’s surface within the next few years, the next question is how will astronauts live and survive its surface? Will we constantly ferry all the necessary supplies such as water and food from Earth, or could astronauts learn to survive on their own? These are questions that a discipline known as ISRU hopes to answer both now and in the years to come. But what is ISRU, and how will it help advance human space exploration as we begin to slowly venture farther away from the only home we’ve ever known?
“ISRU stands for in situ resource utilization where in situ basically means ‘in place or from the original place’,” said Bailey Burns, a System Engineer with Paragon Space Development Corporation, who also received a Master of Science in Space Resources from the Colorado School of Mines. “This basically is talking about using the resources that are there. This is a really big topic as we talk about space exploration because we can’t bring everything with us from Earth when we go to space. One of the largest reasons for this is the gravity well of Earth. To escape Earth’s gravity takes a lot of rocket power. They are estimating that it takes about $10,000 to put 1 kg into space. The short answer is ISRU is about living off of what’s in space to provide a permanent and sustainable human presence in space.”
Dr. Norman Wagner, who is the Unidel Robert L. Pigford Chair in Chemical Engineering at the University of Delaware, believes that both landing pads and habitats are the two most important aspects the Artemis crewed missions should focus on when they first get to the Moon. He says this is due to rocket exhaust being able to “create projectiles”, while radiation and thermal shielding also being necessary or “we will be living underground.”
Harvesting Resources On Mars With Plasmas
https://spaceref.com/newspace-and-tech/ … h-plasmas/
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