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#1 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » OpenFOAM » 2026-01-20 13:11:00

Once you get gas flow and it warms up a bit,  you are probably "thermal choking" somewhere in the heater tube.  That leads to a sonic or very low supersonic speed at the exit,  which really does produce a thrust.  You need either less massflow or a much larger flow cross-section area to avoid that thermal choking.  It does raise the pressures inside the heater tube.  Although,  maybe you really want the thermal choking.  I honestly dunno.  --  GW

#2 Re: Not So Free Chat » Submarines general topic » 2026-01-19 17:15:33

Those old pictures of S-4 are priceless.  She was lost,  you know.  Collision with a ship.  They could not raise her in time to save a few survivors. 

GW

#3 Re: Interplanetary transportation » Celestial Navigation - Apollo history - Solar System flights » 2026-01-19 16:43:39

It was 3.7 psi pure oxygen in the Mercury,  Gemini,  and Apollo (and X-15) suits.  The cabin of the spacecraft would have been similar with a pure oxygen system.  Biggest problem on Apollo was scrubbing out the CO2 from the exhalations.  Stupidly enough,  different shaped canisters of CO2 absorbent were used in the capsule from those used in the LM.  This nearly cost the Apollo-13 crew their lives,  until a contrived work-around adapter could be built from scrap and tape.

The pre-breathe criterion:  oxygen suit pressure must equal or exceed the hab atmosphere nitrogen partial pressure divided by a factor of 1.2.  Higher hab pressures near 1 atm are driving the push toward 8+ psi suits to avoid pre-breathe!  The science supporting that is bad!  Their blood oxygen model mis-predicts what mountain climbers experience above about 2500 meters elevation!  Which is not very high at all (2500 m = 8200 feet).  There is a distinct shift in body metabolism at elevations above 2500 m,  not reflected in the model (or the input data to that model) being used for blood oxygen.

3-5-8 (37.5% oxygen 62.5% nitrogen for 8.00 psia hab pressure) is not the only gas mixture that would work!  I have one even better,  and just as easy to remember!

"Rule of 43" (2.72 psia oxygen,  3.60 psia nitrogen,  for 6.32 psia hab pressure,  or 43% by volume oxygen at 43% of an atmosphere pressure) also works and allows a low enough oxygen suit pressure (only 3.00 psi,  or anything higher) to use far-easier-to-develop MCP suits at only 3-4 psia.  Webb did his MCP work at 3.3 to 3.7 psia in the oxygen MCP suit.  All without any pre-breathe time!  Tested way above the vacuum death point in a altitude chamber at a simulated 87,000 feet,  for 30+ minute exposures,  with the test subject pedalling a bicycle ergonometer.  That was long enough to see any effects of not-perfectly-distributed compression upon the body.

3-5-8 requires a higher suit pressure to avoid pre-breathe time:  5 psi nitrogen/1.2 factor = min suit pressure 4.17 psia or higher).  The higher the min suit pressure,  the more difficult it is to design MCP suits!  But you don't want to go below about 3.00 psia,  because of drying out lung and nasal tissues with work shift-long exposures.  Although for short-term survival and rescue purposes,  even 2 psia oxygen works! 

"Rule of 43" has a higher oxygen partial pressure than Earthly air at 2500 meters,  below which elevation there are no differences in rates of pregnancy and birthing issues compared to those at sea level.  People actually live all the way up to 4500 meters,  but experience higher pregnancy difficulty rates and chronic hypoxia diseases up there.  Yet the oxygen mass concentration with "rule of 43" is less than that of 77 F air at sea level pressure,  restricting the fire danger to only that of warm sea level air,  despite the over-40% by volume oxygen!  It's the less-than-1-atm [pressure that lets you get away with that!  You can even leak down significantly more than 10% before you even start getting close to any troubles.

GW

#4 Re: Interplanetary transportation » Multi-Ship Expeditions, Starboat & Starship, Other. » 2026-01-19 16:26:28

This Stoke Space vehicle is a very interesting 2-stage cargo launcher to low Earth orbit.  Their liquid-cooled metal heat shield is an interesting design,  unlike anything ever flown before.  Something similar was to have been tested aboard the X-20 "Dyna-Soar",  but that project was cancelled somewhere close to 1960 with the first prototype test vehicles coming off the assembly line at Boeing.  Memory may not serve,  but I think it had to do with USAF's manned space program being terminated in favor of NASA' civilian manned space program.  Point is,  it never flew. 

I hope this thing works.  The second stage returns like a space capsule,  heat shield first.  I rather doubt it could return without the payload shroud,  as that would expose the inner workings of the stage to the very hot gases in the separated wake behind the vehicle.  Those are not moving as fast,  but they are at the same effective temperature as the gases smashing against the heat shield. 

You have to fire the deceleration engines around the periphery during entry,  because it is one of the propellants they are using for the coolant.  That vaporizes the propellant,  and you have to do something with it. 

That technique requires a small area compared to the size of the vehicle,  which matches up well with an end-mounted shield.  I doubt it would be practical for SpaceX’s Starship,  because their lateral-surface heat shield is so very much larger compared to the vehicle size.  That would be an enormous quantity of coolant liquid required.

I've seen something somewhere else that suggests one possible application of the Stoke Space vehicle might be "refueling satellites".  Most of the things I see about that topic are aimed at delivering more xenon for the electric thrusters that maneuver such satellites.  Attitude thruster gas is another possible refueling item.

There is the possibility of using this to deliver modest quantities of real combustion rocket propellants to LEO,  in containers inside that payload shroud.  The containers could be delivered and the shroud closed back up for the return.  Or the containers could be designed for delivery of the propellant itself in zero gee.  That's easy with room temperature storables,  you just build a bladdered tank and use gas pressure to squeeze the bladder,  "extruding" the propellant out. 

There are no bladder materials that work at cryogenic temperatures,  so cryogenic propellants require "something else" for direct propellant delivery in zero gee.  I think I know how to do that without spinning or accelerating any vehicles. It's patent-pending right now.

GW

#5 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-17 16:50:43

Kbd512:

Don't attribute things to me that I did not say.  In post 26,  only the first quote is something I actually said.  The implication,  deserved or not,  is that I said the other 2.  And I did not. 

In post 25,  the plot is a government office-supplied piece of data. It says Trump amped-up aid,  with a lot more to come.  If you believe the chart in the first place.  Which I do not.  That chart does NOT match what Ukraine received.  Which since a year ago,  is mostly only from the Europeans. 

As for current government office-supplied information,  I believe NOTHING anymore,  precisely because of the exposed lies of Trump appointees heading the various agencies.  RFK Jr is only 1 example who is totally notorious now.  Noem is another.  Trump himself is another.  There are many more.  Liars all.  As are all politicians,  left or right wing. 

You can tell when they lie:  their lips are moving!  Look ONLY at what they really do (and not what some internet news source tells you they do).  Events cannot be hidden as easily as comments can be lies!  Talk is cheap.  Hiding actions is not.

How are their lies different from the lies of Stalin,  Mussolini,  and Hitler?  Or any of their minions?  Not in any discernable way!  Which is a part of why I am alarmed for American democracy,  and why I oppose them the way that I do.  Only 1 part,  though.  Only one out of my 10 hallmarks of dictatorships.  At least 7 of which I see as fully in place now.

I do not know what Trump might have put back in place regarding sanctions against Russia after his little disillusionment episode with Putin,   not responding to his "peace effort".  Which episode seems to have passed quickly,  and Trump reverted to form,  as near as I have observed.  Before that episode,  Trump did remove all the sanctions Biden had in place.  I have seen NONE put back in place that I can verify,  excepting perhaps denying Venezuelan oil to Russia. 

However,  the Venezuelan tankers are small change compared to what Trump removed in the way of sanctions.  Your post ignores that little fact.

As I said,  BELIEVE NO WORDS of anybody,  on either side!  Look only at what people in positions of authority actually do! 

And THAT is what I do!  As I have repeatedly told you!  And I have repeatedly recommended that you should do,  too!

"Flaming" me for believing other than you,  will NOT EVER change my mind!  All it can do is induce me not to bother looking at this thread anymore.  Is THAT what you really want?

GW

#6 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-17 10:23:27

Kbd512,  some of your arguments fall apart because you believe and quote the far-right-wing lies instead of the facts.  For example:  fact --  Biden funded and shipped weapons to Ukraine.  Fact -- Trump did not.  Fact -- Biden maintained sanctions upon Russia.  Fact -- Trump did not.  As I keep telling you,  but you keep failing to understand,  I do not listen to what ANY public figures say!  I ONLY look at what they actually do!  It is easy to lie.  It is hard to conceal actions.

Void: 

I lived up there for a year and a half and got to know what kind of people Minnesotans are,  generally.  At the outset of this,  nearly all the violence was done by ICE agents violently arresting people that largely should not have been arrested.  There are some illegals,  and some who do violence,  yes,  but they are a minority.  And the very same things have been happening in other cities,  too,  including right down here,  near me,  in Waco,  Texas.  Actions speak far more truthfully than any words.

As this spectacle wore on,  the protestors got more enraged by the evils they see being committed right in front of them.  That provokes them to increasing amounts of rage and violence.  Perfectly understandable and quite predictable.  And it is actually Trump's plan to cause enough trouble with his ICE agents,  so that enough violence will erupt to justify sending active duty army troops to Minneapolis under the Insurrection Act.  Those would be to occupy and intimidate what is usually a mostly-Dem-voting opposition city.  If you scare them bad enough,  they will not risk going out to vote.  We saw that movie before,  in Nazi-occupied Europe,  and in the Bolshevik takeover of Russia.

This stuff in Minneapolis is NOT about illegal immigrants at all!  This is about using ICE as a secret police force and as an agitation agent to justify occupying an American city (and maybe an American state) with regular army troops,  so that resistance to the dictatorship Trump is imposing will be less.  (And he is a traitor of the aid and comfort type,  on at least two counts,  by the way.)

You may be half an hour from downtown Minneapolis,  but you are not safe there.  And it would appear to me that you do not even recognize the danger.  You do seem to quote far-right wing lies about some things.

GW

#7 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-16 15:14:31

I did not say Trump was a Russian agent.  I said it appears to me he is a Putin lapdog.  And I said he is a traitor of the "aid and comfort" type.  On at least 2 counts. 

However,  I think we all can agree that we have seen him cozy up to multiple dictators:  Putin,  Xi,  Kim in N Korea,  and a couple of autocrats in Europe.  All while trashing or dismissing the leaders of multiple democratic countries. 

What that says to me is Trump cozies up to dictators,  because he and they are alike in their basic personalities.  Trump wants to be a dictator.  And I said when he came down the escalator in 2015 that he did not want to be President,  he wanted to be king.  No one listened to me then,  and still too few now. 

King,  autocrat,  dictator,  absolute ruler,  all those are synonyms in this context.  And my other contention is that he nearly is,  now.  7 of my 10 hallmarks of dictatorship are now fully in place in America.  The other 3 are partly in place. 

As for Trump being an idiot in terms of diplomacy,  statesmanship,  or politics-wise,  we certainly agree there. 

But for the Russian interference in the 2016 election,  I think we disagree.  That was quite real.  So was the connection between Russia and the Trump team then.  That is well-documented now.  Although today the weaponized DOJ will deny it. As will the political party that Trump has hijacked and turned into a cult of personality. 

Where have we seen that cult of personality thing before?  Maybe Russia 1917?  Italy 1922?  Germany 1933?  Need I go on?

GW

#8 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-16 11:16:27

And by the way,  either Putin will succeed against Ukraine,  or this thing will continue to drag on.  Either way,  it will look like to Xi in China that the US and Europe and our Pacific allies will not effectively oppose him invading Taiwan and annexing the South China Sea.  Indeed,  the longer Ukraine has dragged on,  the more aggressive the moves Xi's China has been making in that region.  Once he does move WW3 starts in the Pacific.  If Putin "wins" anything over Ukraine,  he will start WW3 in Europe.

THAT is what we face,  in addition to a Trump dictatorship here at home!

GW

#9 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-16 11:07:36

A second example.  Bear in mind that I do not care what ANY politician says,  I look only at what they do,  when I determine their propensity for good vs bad.

When Trump took office for his second term,  he stopped US aid to Ukraine.  He also eliminated the sanctions against Russia that had slowed their economy seriously.  Ukraine continued getting aid from some European countries,  but it was not enough.  In the year of delays since,  they have run out of weapons and supplies,  which forced Zelenskyy to consider surrendering to Putin's demands (which have not changed since before the invasion).  To me,  it appears that has been the real point of Trump's policy toward Ukraine all along,  and certainly of the current "peace process". 

Ukraine is our friend and ally,  and would have made a good addition to NATO to hold back Putin's ambitions in Europe.  Putin's Russia is the clear enemy of us all.  Trump is doing what Putin was unable to do in the 4 years since the invasion began:  force a US friend and ally to surrender to our enemy (Putin's Russia),  which that enemy could not accomplish by himself in 4 years of war.  How is that NOT treason of the aid and comfort type?

As for "advocating for violence",  that was not my intention.  My intention was a warning that violence may be necessary to fend off the dictatorship that is being imposed upon America.  It is more than 70% in place now.  "Advocating violence" may be a felony,  but in times like these,  it probably should not be!

The "secret police" operating in Minneapolis and other places is the one committing most of the violence.  Not all,  but most of it.  Exactly like Stalin's KGB and Hitler's Gestapo and SS. 

We have concentration camps where those detained by this secret police await deportation to infamous foreign prisons.  Mostly without due process,  I might add,  at EVERY step of the way!  This is making people "disappear" for the dictator,  just like the predecessors mentioned above did.

We now have lies posted on government websites,  about several topics that were before just wrongly politicized.  And we have corporate heads of media companies self-censoring to stay on Trump's "good side" (if he has one).  Total control of public information is another hallmark of dictatorships.

Need I belabor this?  There are 10 such hallmarks of dictatorships,  and 7 are fully in place.  The other 3 are only partly in place. 

It usually takes some sort of violent rebellion (or foreign intervention) to overthrow most dictatorships.

There,  I've gone and foretold your future!

GW

#10 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-15 16:44:48

There is no rational reason for Trump wanting Greenland.  It is the territory of a NATO ally,  and we have a base or two there now.  We have had many bases there in the past.  We could easily put more bases there to project US power into the Arctic,  and forestall any Russian or Chinese advances upon Greenland.  And that could be easily done without upsetting or angering any of our allies and NATO partners.

Trump considers none of that,  he just "wants Greenland",  and is apparently willing to use military force to take it.  That would be attacking a NATO ally (Denmark) to do it,  which under Article 5,  is an attack upon all of NATO.  And THAT is why Trump using force to take Greenland is the end of NATO,  since we are supposed to be part of that treaty. 

I'll tell you what all this bluster really is:  Trump is trying anything and everything he can,  to destroy NATO for Putin.  I've seen him as a Putin lap dog ever since he ran for office the first time.  Destroying NATO is something Putin would dearly love to do,  but he cannot do it.  Nor could his Soviet predecessors. 

Russia was not an enemy under the two elected leaders before Putin,  but it is once again under Putin,  just like it was when it was the Soviet Union.  Russia is the enemy.  NATO is our friend.  Destroying NATO for the enemy (Putin's Russia) is very most definitely providing aid to the enemy,  and also inherently comfort to that same enemy. 

And THAT is one of only two definitions of TREASON under our Constitution!  Trump is trying to commit gross treason by tearing apart NATO over Greenland!  For Putin!

This is way beyond any possible politics.  This is about our country and its safety from its enemies.  The GOP majorities in the House and Senate need to get with their Dem colleagues and impeach and convict this ever-so-evident traitor in the White House,  to get him out of there ASAP!!!  And if they do not,  we-the-people should consider them complicit in Trump's treason and get rid of them,  too!

If that takes an uprising,  then so be it!

GW

#11 Re: Human missions » International Space Station (ISS / Alpha) » 2026-01-15 16:30:59

I see the US-sent crew of 4 came home early because the unidentified 1 that had an unidentified medical problem.  It would appear from news reports they landed in their Dragon capsule safely and were picked up.

I have seen nothing about what the medical problem was,  or which 1 was affected.

GW

#12 Re: Meta New Mars » GW Johnson Postings and @Exrocketman1 YouTube videos » 2026-01-11 14:04:45

The odds favor their survival,  but the lethal uncertainty is nowhere near zero.  Initially,  the excuse was eliminating the skip and just going for direct entry.  I do not see anything of that plan in the recent stories.  This reminds me eerily of Challenger and Columbia. 

I am still disappointed seeing the entire debate framed only as "fly what you have" vs "total redesign".  Total redesign is NOT required,  all they need to do is go back to the labor-intensive hand-gunned heat shield.  There is NO REDESIGN associated with that!  They already HAVE that design!  They already flew it!

Doing that would enable them to work out how to cast those tiles with the hex cores in the them,  and fly such a thing,  even as a subscale test article,  to see it actually work right.  I already showed how to do that revised processing with an extrusion press,  here on these forums,  and I already sent that idea to them via a contact I knew within NASA,  who has since retired.  I NEVER EVER heard back from their heat shield people,  to whom my contact forwarded my materials.  "Not invented here" is a real flaw shared by lots of big organizations! 

But it would definitely work,  because the fibrous nature of the charred hex helps tie the otherwise weak carbon char together.  It's a composite material that is better than just the carbon char from the polymer alone.  I know that because of my experience with ablatives in ramjets and solid rockets.  If you cannot reinforce the char,  it goes away too quickly,  in one fashion or another.  Which experience goes way beyond sample testing in an arc jet tunnel,  and running CFD codes that usually do not deserve to be believed,  without confirmation testing!  I'm talking real burn experiences with real motors and engines here!

The Artemis 1 failure already proved that fiber reinforcement contention of mine!  The only difference between Artemis 1 and the first Orion that flew was that they deleted the hex to cast the tiles instead of hand-gunning the polymer into a hex core already attached to the capsule,  like Apollo.  Which is what flew on the first Orion.  That's NOT a FULL re-design of anything,  it's only a variation on the cast tile processing they now prefer (at the risk of the crew's lives,  I might add,  if they don't do something to reinforce that char).

GW

#13 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » An astronaut is urging NASA to form new spacesuit program » 2025-12-27 16:31:04

We have a lot of experiences in prior decades with oxygen suits in the 3 to 4 psia range.  There is no cognitive problem in that range.  But,  below about 3 psia,  you run into lung and nasal tissue dry-out problems,  except for very short exposures,  measured in minutes.

The main point about suit pressures is that the closer you are to 3-4 psia,  the easier it is to do mechanical counterpressure suit design.  Which should be as MCP underwear,  worn underneath unpressurized garments to provide thermal and mechanical protection.  With known material technologies,  these start becoming infeasible for suit pressures above 4 psia.

In recent years,  I have seen oxygen suit pressures creeping toward,  or even exceeding 8 psia.  There is no need for this,  except to eliminate pre-breathe with something resembling Earthly air at near sea level pressures in the habitat.  Synthetic air (oxygen-nitrogen mix) at 1 atm pressure has partial pressures of 3.077 psia oxygen,  and 11.619 psia nitrogen. 

Using the NASA pre-breathe criterion on a nitrogen pressure that high produces a min oxygen suit pressure of 9.682 psia.  See why there has been suit pressure "creep" upwards?

You do NOT need that much habitat pressure,  nor do you need oxygen partial pressure at sea level values!  Nor do you have to have only 20.94 volume % oxygen in your mix!  There are plenty of people doing just fine living and reproducing at higher altitudes.  Altitudes to 2500 m (8200 feet) produce pregnancy and birthing trouble rates indistinguishable from those at sea level.  So says history dating all the way back to the Spanish colonies in South America.

The only issue you run into when increasing the oxygen % in your mix is fire danger.  But that depends upon concentration in units same as density,  not just %.  If you lower total atm pressures,  you lower those concentrations for reducing fire danger. 

Try my rule-of-43 atmosphere!  43% by volume oxygen,  at 43% of an atmosphere pressure,  in the 2-gas mix.  6.319 psia in the hab.  The oxygen partial pressure is 2.717 psia,  just about the same or a bit higher than that at 2500 m on Earth.  The nitrogen partial pressure is 3.602 psia,  which divided by the no pre-breathe criterion is a min oxygen suit pressure of 3.001 psia,  right in line with the known min limit to avoid drying out tissues too fast.  And the oxygen concentration equal to or less than that of room temperature air at sea level,  for no worse fire danger than on Earth.

How is that not a good solution to habitat and oxygen suit pressures?  On Mars,  the moon,  out in space,  pretty much anywhere!  And it makes MCP suits eminently feasible,  too boot!

GW

#14 Re: Meta New Mars » RobertDyck Postings » 2025-12-26 17:04:05

Use the long-known NASA criterion for no pre-breathe time.  The partial pressure in the habitat,  of the nitrogen,  may not exceed the total pressure of the pure oxygen fed to the suit,  by more than a factor of 1.2. 

If you satisfy that criterion,  there is no "pre-breathe" time associated with donning an oxygen suit and going outside immediately,  without risking the bends from the nitrogen. 

If you do more than about half an atmosphere of 21% O2/ 79% N2 mix in the habitat atmosphere,  at more than around 0.5 atm hab atmosphere pressure,  this is impossible to do. 

But half or a little less than half an atmosphere of oxygen-nitrogen mix in the habitat atmosphere,  meets that criterion for donning a pure O2 suit and just going outside with no pre-breathe.

GW

#15 Re: Interplanetary transportation » Propellant Sourced from Moon » 2025-12-21 16:31:19

If you have to process tons of regolith to get pounds of water,  that is not an easily-recovered or inexpensive resource!  Period!  We already know about low-concentration resources being bad mining bets,  from centuries of prospecting and mining right here on Earth.  It's worse in space,  where you have to have pressure suits and life support.

An "easily recovered ice resource" would yield a ton of dirty water from only a few to at most only several tons of regolith.   That's a buried glacier,  not small bits of frost on regolith particles!  Maybe there's such a thing on the moon,  and maybe not.  Nobody yet knows.

There really are very likely buried glacier resources like that on Mars,  although we have yet to verify that on the ground.  And certainly on some of the icy moons of the outer planets.  Plus all the Kuiper belt objects.  But maybe not the moon.

Talking about thinly-spread concentrations as if they were cheaply- and easily-recovered items is marketing hype (spelled "marketeering lies"),  not technical truth.  Don't be taken in by it.

You first go to the moon and prospect to find out what is really there,  where exactly it is located,  and in what concentrations it exists.  Only then can you plan your next steps.  It's all about getting real ground truth. 

GW

#16 Re: Human missions » Moxie and only Moxie Oxygen creation » 2025-12-21 16:16:03

Propellant manufacture is by far more hungry for high oxygen generation rates.  The equipment to do this will inherently be large,  and power-consumptive.  There is no way around that ugly little fact of life.

I rather think that electrolyzing water purified from mined ice is the better choice for propellant manufacture,  especially if the propellant is LOX-LH2.  Your biggest energy expenditure will be for liquifying the gases.  Although electrolysis might be a fairly close second,  if the ~6% efficiency typical here obtains there. 

It is possible to get LOX-LCH4 propellants by using both water and Martian CO2.  But it's neither electrolysis nor the Moxie process.  Just more big heavy,  power-consumptive machinery to do it on a big scale. 

Purifying water from likely-polluted ice is a thermal process after an initial filtering process.  Either you distill it,  or you freeze it.  Sea water freezes to fresh water ice,  enhancing the brine content in the sea water just below the ice cake.  You could run it through 2 to 4 steps of that,  and get most of the various salts out,  possibly even including the perchlorates.  But all the water you start with will reach the end as product;  there will be significant concentrated brine waste.  You can take advantage of the cold environment to do the freezing.  Distillation would work just like it does here.  You just need to supply a lot of heat energy.  And again,  not all the water you start with arrives as product.  There will always be concentrated brine waste!  It is a Second Law thing.

For the Martian CO2,  the biggest problem is compression.  Compressors there will look (and weigh) more like vacuum pumps,  a lot of power-consumptive machinery for just a very small throughput stream.  The 6 mbar atmospheric pressure is what forces that outcome.  10 mbar,  no difference.  Same problem:  the local "air" is a 1st cousin to vacuum.

If you can slightly cool some sort of duct to a temperature below about -110 F,  the CO2 will preferentially condense out first as a dry ice frost or snow in the duct.  You would have to stop and recover it out of that duct,  making this more of a batch process than any sort of continuous flow process.  Be that as it may,  pack the recovered dry ice tightly into a pressure container,  and warm it above -110 F.  It will be high-pressure CO2 gas in that container in a small amount of time,  and for very little energy input compared to direct compressor-type compression.  Once near 1+ atm pressure,  your ordinary Earthly-type compressors and other machinery will work "right".  But not until you "pre-compress" it to near 1 atm.

GW

#17 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Mars Temperature Readings and Calculated Estimates » 2025-12-18 22:00:24

Memory fails with age.  I confused Insight with its subsurface "mole" probe,  with Phoenix,  which really did land near the polar ice cap.  Phoenix was not equipped to measure subsurface temperatures.  Insight was,  but landed close to the equator.  The "mole" probe on Insight did not work "as advertised".  Even so,  I am now guessing the AI might be closer to "right" than I was.  Subsurface below 2 m might well be -50 C,  over much of Mars.   

GW

#18 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Mars Temperature Readings and Calculated Estimates » 2025-12-18 11:51:50

A reminder:  the insight mission was very near a polar cap.  All the others have been at "temperate to equatorial" latitudes. 

Subsurface conditions are quite different at polar latitudes here on Earth.

At around 30 deg N latitude here in Texas,  the soil temperature about 6 feet or more down is near 58 F,  with the year-round-day0night average temperature (standard atmosphere model) 59 F.  That's 2 to 3 m down!!!

At the surface,  summer soil temperatures are near the 95-105 F daytime air temperature,  and around 80 F at night.  In the winter,  pipes buried 6 inches or more do not freeze,  if the cold snap is shorter than 2 weeks below freezing.  A foot is better insurance.  But both water systems and fire mains are buried much deeper than that.  Fire mains are 6 feet down,  by code.

GW

#19 Re: Human missions » Why Artemis is “better” than Apollo. » 2025-12-17 10:55:49

Up to now,  the usual orbital launch vehicle is two stages with a payload shroud.  It has proven possible to recover the first stage,  even if is largely constructed of aluminum,  but ONLY because speed at entry is far lower than from orbit.  Nearer 1 km/s than 8.  With aluminum,  you usually need an entry burn to slow down enough.  With stainless steel,  this is proving not to be necessary.  There is very little in the way of plasma at Mach 6,  and the hot air temperature is near 1800-1900 K.  And for only a minute or two.

Second stages capable of surviving entry from orbit are a real problem,  simply because the speed is so much higher.  The exposure is to far higher plasma temperatures (in the 4000 to 8000 K range),  and for a far longer duration(3 or 4 minutes).  So far,  it has proven to require some or all of the stage to be covered in some sort of heat shield material.  Coming back from the moon or deep space is even worse:  similar exposure times,  but plasma temperatures can approach 6000 to 11,000 K.

What works at best mass ratio for an expendable second stage is not what you have to build for a recoverable second stage,  as SpaceX has been demonstrating with its Starship.  It must also be a qualified,  heat-shielded entry vehicle,  and in addition to that must also be capable of some sort of final descent and landing.  That pretty much at least doubles,  and maybe triples,  the stage inert mass fraction.

GW

#20 Re: Human missions » Humidity Moisture Habitat Air Management » 2025-12-17 10:23:17

You will need doors and airlocks to go into and out of this structure.  Those things have to open and close.  A simple duct through the wall does not have to open and close.  That is an easier thing to do than installing doors and airlocks.  Why not take advantage of the cold heat sink outside to cause the heat you must move to flow spontaneously from warm to cold,  instead of expending power to pump it against an adverse temperature gradient?

Whatever the population is,  that sets how big this dehumidification system must be.  I do NOT have that information!  It is the water vapor in their exhalations that creates the excess humidity in the habitat atmosphere.  You want to condense that out and recover the water to reuse it.  The warm/cold loop is a way to do that with only one moving part:  an axial-flow fan,  and a very low energy cost to run it.  I'm just guessing about a 2 foot diameter duct flowing at something in the 4 to 20 foot/sec range of speed.  Very low friction loss to overcome with the fan.  We are talking a few dozen watts to run the fan.

You do not run the humid atmosphere through that loop,  that risks clogging the duct with frost.  It is a closed-loop system isolated from the atmosphere in a pressure-tight loop of simple sheet metal ducting.  The same gas mixture can be used inside the loop as in the habitation,  but it needs to be zero humidity.  The atmosphere in the habitation you want to run at about 30% relative humidity,  no lower than about 20%.  Risk of drying out nasal tissues if you go too low.

The inherent heat loss to the outside is air flow at maybe 1 to 2 lbm/sec dropping from around 77 F to no colder than 40 F.  That loss would be trivial compared to the heat loss directly through the walls of the dome,  simply because of its enormous exposed surface area.

GW

#21 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » A City Rises on the Plain... » 2025-12-17 10:11:25

If the dome shape is parabolic,  where it contacts the foundations will be nearly vertical.  I looked at the vertical case just to see how bad things could be. 

It is not my intention to design or redesign this habitation.  This is Calliban's idea.  I just thought of something he should be worrying about;  and maybe he has already done that.

I'm not sure who suggested vapor compression dehumidification first.  But since this thing is to be built in a cold place,  I suggested an easier-to-build,  lower-energy-cost means to dehumidify. 

GW

#22 Re: Unmanned probes » MAVEN Launch | Nov 18, 2013 1:28 p.m. EST » 2025-12-17 10:04:44

From AIAA's Daily Launch email newsletter for Wed 12-17-2025:


Space
NASA's MAVEN spacecraft is still silent at Mars — and apparently is spinning, too
NASA still hasn't heard from its MAVEN Mars orbiter, and the spacecraft appears to be spinning in an odd way as well.

-----   
My take:

Odds are the craft was struck by something:  a meteor or a piece of debris.  That event would both alter the orbit and induce a spin,  because it is extremely unlikely the axis of the strike would pass through the center of gravity.  And those literally are the two symptoms seen,  as described in the full space.com article this headline links to.

GW

#23 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Companion for Mars Expedition Number One; 17 crew members » 2025-12-13 15:45:11

Hi Spacenut:

Thanks for making my chart visible instead of a link.  I still do not really understand how you did that. 

This was the basic notion applied to exploration-onward for the last 500 years or so here on Earth,  although it often did not get done "right".  On other worlds that are more harshly fatal,  you must do it right,  and with great attention to getting things "right" in every phase.  The other worlds lack the air,  water,  and food that were pretty much available most everywhere here on Earth 300-500 years ago. 

GW

#24 Re: Human missions » Humidity Moisture Habitat Air Management » 2025-12-13 15:38:55

When you are located in a cold place like most of Mars,  or the lunar night,  take advantage of that cold to condense the moisture out of your air.  You need only a way to collect the frost/ice to use it for water. 

GW

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