Tag: exploration

Starship

On Starship progress:

If SpaceX hit the targets for the Starhopper and the Starship then SpaceX will have accelerated rocket development by 4x. This would be 10-20x faster than most of their competition. SpaceX continues to get more ambitious with its rockets and is accelerating its rate of progress. This faster rate of development will mean that the world will get the space program that we have always wanted.

2019-09-09: What the future may hold for starship:

The next 7 years could see space habitation increase 100s of times. We can go from 6 people in space to 100s in a larger rotating one gravity space station and a lunar mining base.

2019-10-15: What moon missions and bases look like:

SpaceX will leave most Starships on Mars or the Moon, when they are flown for long-range missions. SpaceX will need to use ~5 launches of Super Heavy Starships to fully fuel a Super Heavy Starship in orbit. They will then send a fully fueled Super Heavy Starship to Mars. The Super Heavy booster will separate around the orbit of the moon. The booster will return and 37 Raptor engines will be reused. The 6 Raptor engines in the Starship will take the Starship to Mars with ~100 tons of payload.

Starship Moon mission needs a 10-ton lunar lander
2019-11-05:

Robert Zubrin indicates there is a need to stage the SpaceX Starship from low earth orbit or injection orbits for the moon and Mars. Missions to the moon would be far more efficient with a 10-ton lunar lander. This could be a mini-starship.

2021-03-03: History!!! To celebrate, let’s cancel SLS

2021-05-13: Robert Zubrin on the profound potential that Starship represents

Starship won’t just give us the ability to send human explorers to Mars, the moon, and other destinations in the inner solar system, it offers us a 100x increase in overall operational capability to do pretty much anything we want to do in space. That includes not only supporting a muscular program of probes to the outer solar system, and making all sorts of experimental investigations in Earth orbit economical, but enabling the construction of giant space telescopes. Much of our knowledge of physics has come from astronomy. This is so because the universe is the biggest and best lab there is. There is no better place to do astronomy than space. The 2.4-meter Hubble Space Telescope has made extraordinary discoveries. What might we learn once we are able to build 2.4-kilometer telescopes in deep space? The possibilities are literally inconceivable.

2021-10-12: a FT take focusing on competitors complaining, instead of scrapping their obsolete approaches:

SpaceX’s vertically integrated manufacturing approach will also deprive other US suppliers of business, weakening the wider industrial base the country had built up to support its long-term ambitions in space, Amazon and others warn. However, SpaceX’s customers — including those in government — do not seem to share the misgivings. “Before SpaceX we only really had the ULA, so we’re in a better position than we were,” says Phil McAlister, director of Nasa’s commercial space flight division. Diamandis goes further: “The US government is lucky to have a company like SpaceX based here,” he says, since its efficiencies feed through directly into the US space programme. And companies that compete with SpaceX in some markets seem more than happy to use its launch services, despite supporting a rival.

2021-10-30: Another interesting take that argues that Starship will change the entire space industry away from “reduce weight at all cost” towards rapidly producing space worthy hardware at scale:

Starship obliterates the mass constraint and every last vestige of cultural baggage that constraint has gouged into the minds of spacecraft designers. There are still constraints, as always, but their design consequences are, at present, completely unexplored. We need a team of economists to rederive the relative elasticities of various design choices and boil them down to a new set of design heuristics for space system production oriented towards maximizing volume of production. Or, more generally, maximizing some robust utility function assuming saturation of Starship launch capacity. A dollar spent on mass optimization no longer buys a dollar saved on launch cost. It buys nothing. It is time to raise the scope of our ambition and think much bigger. Prior to Starship, heavy machinery for building a Moon base could only come from NASA, because only NASA has the expertise to build a rocket propelled titanium Moon tractor for $1b per unit. After Starship, Caterpillar or Deere or Kamaz can space qualify their existing commodity products with very minimal changes and operate them in space. In all seriousness, some huge Caterpillar mining truck is already extremely rugged and mechanically reliable. McMaster-Carr already stocks 1000s of parts that will work in mines, on oil rigs, and any number of other horrendously corrosive, warranty voiding environments compared to which the vacuum of space is delightfully benign. A space-adapted tractor needs better paint, a vacuum compatible hydraulic power source, vacuum-rated bearings, lubricants, wire insulation, and a redundant remote control sensor kit. I can see NASA partnering with industry to produce and test these parts, but that is no way to service the institutional overhead embodied by a team of 100s of people toiling on a single mission for 10 years. There is a reason that JPL’s business depends on a steady stream of directed flagship missions with $1b price tags. Hordes of PhDs don’t come cheap and need a lot of care and feeding.

2021-11-05: The new 10 year NASA research plan doesn’t yet take vastly better costs into account. The telescopes in particular need to be rethought completely. Perhaps a combination of HavEx and LUVOIR, redesigned to be 10x cheaper, would do the trick.

2 current NASA mission concepts, HabEx (Habitable Exoplanet Imaging Mission) and LUVOIR (Large UV/Optical/IR Surveyor), are aimed at pulling this off. Both would use large, extremely clear mirrored optical telescopes, UV rays, and infrared to hunt for exoplanets with signs of water, oxygen, and ozone. HabEx would use a “starshade” to block out light from stars to reveal the planets surrounding them; LUVOIR would use a very large system of unfolding mirrors. A blend of the 2, though—now that might be just right for a mission that “combines a large, stable telescope with an advanced coronagraph intended to block the light of bright stars,” as the survey states, and is “capable of surveying a 100 or more nearby Sun-like stars to discover their planetary systems and determine their orbits and basic properties. Then for the most exciting ~25 planets, astronomers will use spectroscopy at ultraviolet, visible, and near- infrared wavelengths to identify multiple atmospheric components that could serve as biomarkers.”

The Bellewether

It’s rare to find a truly secret space left in New York City but we recently had the opportunity to discover one, right in the middle of midtown Manhattan. Our friends at The Vanderbilt Republic, who run the inspiring programming at the Gowanus Loft, like the camera obscura installation in years past, are converting a raw space in midtown that was once an electrical repair company. The cavernous 800 m2 space is made possible by a combination of history and zoning – it actually spans 3 buildings, grandfathered in when skyscrapers were built on top. The once outdoor courtyards were closed in to fulfill a functional purpose in perpetuity, a state of impermanent operability – until now. The multi-room discovery is to be known as The Bellewether, a flexible performance and production space

Manhattan Secrets

In his latest book, Manhattan’s Little Secrets, author John Tauranac leads readers on a fascinating hunt for the overlooked and under-seen around every corner of New York City. Some of the Manhattan secrets that Tauranac reveals in his book include where to find actual stones from the dungeon where Joan of Arc was held, where to find an ancient symbol of Christianity on an apartment house and how to spot an architect’s likeness worked into the statuary of a building he designed.

Brooklyn Bridge Champagne Vaults

The cavernous vaults, which are located closer to the foot of the bridge, were rented out as storage space holding wine, champagne and liqueurs, as well as newspapers from the Evening World and produce from the Fulton Fish Market. Year round, the alcohol was kept in the stable temperatures afforded by the Brooklyn Bridge vaults and the rent collected helped offset the cost of constructing the bridge.

It is known that the vaults were constructed first in 1876, likely to appease distributors like Luyties and Racky’s whose storage facilities were demolished to build the bridge. A faded logo for Pol Rogers, the French champagne house favored by Winston Churchill, is still visible. The vaults were closed during World War I and repurposed for non-alcohol storage uses during Prohibition. In 1934, 6 months after the repeal of Prohibition, the city ceremoniously turned over the keys to a new tenant, Anthony Oechs & Co., an alcohol distributor, at a party inside the vaults attended by 100s of revelers.

Another curious find was uncovered in 2006 inside the Manhattan-side tower of the Brooklyn Bridge. A veritable time capsule was discovered by city workers which contained a stockpile of supplies in the event of nuclear attack. Put into reserve at the height of the Cold War in the late 1950s and early 1960s, this space, intended as both fallout shelter and storeroom, was forgotten for nearly 50 years.

As reported by The New York Times at the time of the discovery, the vault contained “water drums, medical supplies, paper blankets, drugs and calorie-packed crackers — an estimated 352K of them, sealed in 10s of watertight metal canisters and, it seems, still edible.” Boxes with blankets were labeled “For Use Only After Enemy Attack.”

Moon Express

Our Moon Express family of flexible, scalable robotic explorers are capable of reaching the Moon and other solar system destinations from Earth orbit.

this is very well done, as far as ambitious videos go. this company is arguably going to get to the prize before spacex. they’ve just received permission to land on the moon (from the us, which planted it’s flag there first): Press Kit

Moon case

an initial lunar settlement is possible through further development of existing design work, but that a superior option is neither immediate nor obvious. Selecting a single framework (or a specific hybrid of several) is critical to best funnel capital into the most promising technologies. An action path is proposed that leverages consideration of permanence and significance as feedback to clearly characterize the best design choice for initial funding. Permanence seeks to answer, ‘How can we ensure that the construction of the first lunar base is able to expand into the foreseeable future in both population and space?,’ while significance seeks to answer, ‘How can we ensure that the consequences of operating the settlement are economically beneficial to society?’ There is not much literature to answer these questions, despite the importance of the answers.

Beneath Grand Central

Grand Central’s immense underground is comprised of 2 subterranean levels with 44 platforms and 67 tracks, extending over 100 blocks beneath the streets of Manhattan. It is both the largest train station and one of the largest inaccessible underground environments in the world.

This inaccessible landscape is like a cavernous portal into another world. A colossus rich in untouched artifacts, forgotten equipment, and miles of tangled track—all covered in cm of remnant soot, railroad dust, and aging debris. The Vast …Beneath Grand Central is an enchanted landscape, straddling the line between the center of the universe and a feeling 1M km away, being elsewhere unlike any other place in the City. This cavernous environment is both functional and beautiful in its efficiency and utility—duly capable of touching our solitary senses and recalibrating our allegiances to the physical world in one of the most densely populated urban environments in the world.

Moon Base Alpha

an economically self-sustainable lunar base could be established for $5B. This price point is surprising and significant for the space community. Not only could this be achievable within current space program budgets, it offers the tantalizing possibility that a single passionate donor could fund the entire program