NASA Considers Mobile Lunar Base 303
colonist writes "During the Apollo missions, astronauts explored on foot or in rovers. The next astronauts on the moon may move the entire base instead. Marc Cohen, from NASA's Ames Research Center, proposes a lunar base on wheels or legs, such as the habot (robotic habitat) or the mobitat (mobile habitat). Cohen considers mobile bases superior to rovers: 'To avoid life-threatening or other compromising situations that might occur with only one rover traveling to a remote place, a second rover might travel with the first. But what if the second rover runs into a problem, too - the same or a different problem? Well, that means a third rover. So, why not make the entire base mobile, so that all the resources, reliability and redundancy of the lunar mission move with the excursion crew?' Of course, mobile bases are nothing new. Terran buildings have been lifting off for years."
Space RV's (Score:4, Funny)
That's just the ticket, ain't it. Winnebago finally becomes a NASA vendor. Mobile base, spare wheel on the back with a "Good Sam" wheel cover, towing a couple of electric Honda Quad-Runners as mini rovers. I can see it now. Space tourism will be huge.
Re:Space RV's (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Space RV's (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, but will the mud flaps feature Yosemite Sam ("Back Off!") or the ever popular Reclining Busty Chick?
Re:Space RV's (Score:2)
Actually, my first thoughts were about a particular search engine...
Winnebago. (Score:2, Interesting)
I think it'd be great if boat mfr's, RV mfr's, and cheap house mfr's, all got together and developed a common, open, standardized framework for habitat design and construction, with NASA involved.
Every time I look at a UFO, I think to myself 'well-designed Winnebago', and if I could, I'd buy one of those instead of ___insert_favorite_waste_of_realty_here___ any time
Re:Space RV's (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm.
As long as (Score:5, Funny)
Re:As long as (Score:5, Funny)
It's a long story so I'll cut it short; he was involved in training some soldiers from the 101 Airborne whilst they were in the UK and got into a conversation with one of their officers:
Bemused US Airborne Dude: "say, why do you brits spend so much time running up and down mountains in training? Can't you just radio a chopper?"
UK Dude: "Well, what happens if it gets shot down?"
Bemused US Airborne dude: "We radio for another one."
UK Dude: "And if the second one gets shot down?"
Even more bemused US Airborne dude: "We radio for another one..."
Train hard, fight easy as they say...
Re:As long as (Score:2)
You're on your own. The rest of us Must Dissent.
To the Moon, Alice (Score:5, Interesting)
- P.S.: I know I just contradicted myself in some fashion, but so be it.
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm guessing those who are motivated with money and exploration [scaled.com] will be the same ones motivated to reach the moon 'first.'
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:3, Insightful)
Keep dreaming...
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:2, Insightful)
Wait...
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:5, Informative)
* Higher gravity means less need for strength training to stop bone loss and other problems
* Partial natural radiation shielding
* Ample known water supplies (moon ice is currently only speculative, despite plenty of lunar-orbit studying)
* Cheap to get bulk raw materials to anywhere we care about. Even cheaper to get raw materials to Earth than it is from the moon, due to the orbital energy of the moon that needs to be overcome.
* Ample sunlight for farming; artificial light for farming is a pretty doomed concept, when you do the energy calculations.
* Partial-pressure domes
* Far more mineral rich in every respect except for Helium-3, which is currently pretty worthless.
* A perfect stopping point for a triangle trade with the incredibly mineral rich asteroid belt (Mars raw materials and people can get to the asteroid belt with very little energy; asteroid belt materials get sent to Earth; Earth sends small, high tech components that Mars can't build to Mars).
* Major terraforming prospects; estimated workforce needed to terraform Mars to 1atm=10,000 people; procodes enough pressure and CO2 for plants, which over about 100 years can produce enough O2 for humans to breathe.
Of course, the big downside: It's far. Still, I think the pros really outweigh the cons. A Moon base would be like an antarctic research station. A Mars base would be like a colony. Stopping at the moon just seems like a waste of time - it'll take so much in terms of resources to keep it going that it will severely sap from the Mars effort. Just think of food and nuclear fuel shipping costs alone... Mars will take more resources initially, but at least it becomes somewhat sustainable over time since large-scale partially-pressured agriculture is feasable, and there's enough good raw minerals in easily processable forms...
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:2, Informative)
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:4, Interesting)
If there is a major accident, an astronaut can get back to a tried-and-tested apollo style lunar capsule, launch pretty much immediately and get back home in a few days.
On mars, you only have fast(ish) routes back to earth every 18 months (assuming something close to current rocket tech) with a 6 month transit time. A moon base will also give NASA time to invent new vehicles for landing men on, surviving on, then returning from another world with reasonable safety - remember they have not built such vehicles for over 30 years.
Zubrins plan for Mars is tempting, but NASAs manned program is really shaky at the moment post columbia - if they tried that direct-to-mars route & had a major catastrophe, which would be very possible given all the unknowns, they would be in political hot water. An easier & sucsessful moon mission would give them the political confidence to carry on to mars, and develop a range of useful technologies in the meantime.
I personally think that the X-prize is an interesting route - when you think about it it was *enthusiasts* that got men on the moon quickly and safely - the timescale for Apollo development was amazing, now we look back. Think of those early fanatical engineers, like van braun.. I think that a series of objectives, ending with prizes for the first hotels on the moon/mars, could acheieve far more for much much less public money - maybe operating in tandem with NASA agencies. If fact it seems NASA is starting to think this way too, and offer its own X-prize..
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:4, Interesting)
* Partial natural radiation shielding
* Ample known water supplies (moon ice is currently only speculative, despite plenty of lunar-orbit studying)
Won't argue with those.
* Cheap to get bulk raw materials to anywhere we care about. Even cheaper to get raw materials to Earth than it is from the moon, due to the orbital energy of the moon that needs to be overcome.
No. MUCH cheaper in terms of deltaV to get something from Luna to Earth than from Mars to Earth. Roughly 2400m/s to get to Earth from Luna, 5700m/s from Mars to Earth.
* Ample sunlight for farming; artificial light for farming is a pretty doomed concept, when you do the energy calculations.
Probably. No clue how this would work out with artificial lights for two weeks, natural sunlight for two weeks. On the other hand, people grow marijiuana indoors all the time. Can't be too hard...
* Partial-pressure domes
Hmmm? Martian atmospheric pressure is ~2% of terrestrial. Close enough to a vacuum to make no practical difference in designing a dome, I think.
* Far more mineral rich in every respect except for Helium-3, which is currently pretty worthless.
Probably. But by no means certain. We've looked at a handful of surface spots on both places, so we really don't know too much about the mineral resources of either.
* A perfect stopping point for a triangle trade with the incredibly mineral rich asteroid belt (Mars raw materials and people can get to the asteroid belt with very little energy; asteroid belt materials get sent to Earth; Earth sends small, high tech components that Mars can't build to Mars).
No. deltaV requirements to go from Luna to an asteroid ~500Gm from Earth are essentially the same as those required from Mars to the same rock. And launch windows from Luna come along almost twice as often, giving Luna an edge. Admittedly, there are some materials (carbon, specifically) that we can get in quantity on Mars that we can't get from Luna. So there will no doubt be a reason to move some materials from Mars to the asteroids. But anything available both on Mars and Luna will be equally expensive to ship from either, and more convenient from Luna because of more frequent launch windows.
* Major terraforming prospects; estimated workforce needed to terraform Mars to 1atm=10,000 people; procodes enough pressure and CO2 for plants, which over about 100 years can produce enough O2 for humans to breathe.
Won't argue with this one either.
Mars base is desirable, but it does not eliminate the need for a Lunar base - if nothing else, the Lunar base should be where the majority of the Mars spacecraft are built. Not the complicated parts, necessarily, but structures, liquid oxygen for fuel/atmosphere, that sort of thing. If we could build all of a Mars ship but the electronics, food, and H2 from Lunar materials, we'd significantly lower cost of a Mars mission.
Yah, we'd frontload a lot of costs by building the Lunar infrastructure, but in the long run it would save us a great deal of money. Even in the medium run. And possibly in the short run (the first three-five missions, perhaps) we'd even come out slightly ahead....
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:3, Informative)
You liquify O2. That accounts for ~5/6 of the fuel mass required for an H2/O2 rocket. Y
Re:To the Moon, Alice (Score:4, Informative)
Keep in mind also that the atmosphere of mars is really all of the radiation shielding there is. With no magnetic field to speak of, the martian atmosphere is exposed to solar wind and all of the other hard radiation that the sun throws at it. That's one of the reasons they have such a hard time keeping probes and robotic explorers "alive" on the partian surface.
Did any one else (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Did any one else (Score:5, Funny)
from the one-miiiiillion-dollars dept.
^H^H^H^H^HWrong! (Score:3, Funny)
supporting applied science (as opposed to
pure science), the mobile lunar base will
be used as a replacement penal colony for
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Ashcroft has adviced
that it will be the only way to keep the
Red Cross, ACLU, and Amnesty International
away from his "boy toys" in detention there.
Re:^H^H^H^H^HWrong! (Score:3, Informative)
Terran? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Terran? (Score:3, Funny)
Does anyone else think NASA reads too much SCI-FI (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does anyone else think NASA reads too much SCI- (Score:5, Informative)
In this particular case though, I'm not so sure. It just seems that you would take too much of a hit on cost and reliability to make up for any possible benefits. For one, a mobile base can't be built into the regolith for insulation, a feature one hopes a lunar base would have.
Re:Does anyone else think NASA reads too much SCI- (Score:2)
Disagree (Score:2, Interesting)
Seriously, I feel a bit sorry for the folks there. The interesting science that they do is not really interesting enough to warrant the billions invested unless they can come up with military applications or appeal to the Trekker in the public. Hence have the nanobe "discovery" while shilling for money to send men to Mars or school teachers on missions to generate excitement for the space shuttle. Meanwhile, planetary probe missions get cancelled.
Maybe it is time to
Re:Disagree (Score:4, Interesting)
I really don't know why people perpetuate the myth that NASA is a branch of the military. I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think NASA has launched a military satellite since the Challenger explosion. All military satellites are currently launched by expendable boosters, built by Lockheed and Boeing, from Air Force Bases (Cape Canavaral and Vandenberg).
NASA missions, on the other hand, have all been about the ISS, Earth science, and the effects of weightlessness on humans. I'm not even sure NASA is involved with cutting-edge military-based aerospace research (most of that happening out in Nevada now).
Can anyone expand on this?
Inherent problem (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sorry, but this is just one of the many reasons why a mobile lunar base is infeasible (as of now). The sheer coolness of it is astronomical (haha, get it?), but the costs are simply too high.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Seriously though, it would shield from (some? UV?) radiation as well as help against debris striking the base (provided the debris was small and/or the base & tunnels were deep enough underground).
Plus, the moon rock between you and space would provide some sort of insulation and therefore warmth as opposed to being simply "out in the open", wouldn't it? And how hard could moon-mining be anyway? There's no issue of debris, just shoot it out into space, or even at Earth and it will just burn up (assuming the pieces are small enough). Of course, this could be bad as if they don't make it we could end up with a lovely ring of debris around the moon.
Regardless of what happens, there's some pretty cool stuff waiting in the future. Hope it's in my lifetime.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Inherent problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, regolith is such a good insulator, the base would have to vent off heat.
Not terribly hard. Remember, everything weighs ~6x less on the moon. Picking stuff up and putting it down elsewhere is much easier. But also, regolith is mostly of a very fine composition. Something similar to the sand you find in hourglass timers. Not to mention no water to allow it to clump. I would imagine such a small angle of repose would lead to a more inefficient dig than generally expected.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, for starters there would be the problem about tunnels not being air-tight. Although I suppose a thin sheet of plastic would solve that (since the air pressure will push it outward against the walls of the tunnel).
Re:Inherent problem (Score:2)
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Interesting)
actually, vacuum is a hell of an insulator, the only way you can lose heat in space is via radiation, which is a fairly slow process, You wont instantl freeze if you take of your space suit (in the shadow). What we would need to insulate against would be solar radiation, since that can get pretty hot up there (~150C, IIRC), plus we get the benefit
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Insightful)
You're probably right about the cost though, and weight would certainly come into play with actually GETTING the sheilding there.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Inherent problem (Score:4, Informative)
Of coure it would be possible to do something similar for NASA's lunar-camper. It would just add to the weight. A static underground shelter as you suggest would be much better.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:5, Interesting)
The diameter of the moon is about 2162 miles, so the circumference is about 6800 miles. So at less than 10 mph, even at the equator, you can keep the entire moon between you and solat radiation.
Not realistic at the equator, but rather fun.
Nearer the poles though, this could be entirely feasible. Use the mobile base to simply avoid daylight.
Rules out solar power, of course.
Steve
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Funny)
Something tells me that this is something slashdotters can contribute a lot to. I call it Project: Parents' Basement.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Inherent problem (Score:3, Informative)
The closest analogue to this would be the ISS, but as far as I know, it flies beneath the Van Allen belts. Outside the belt then the risk from charged particles increases a lot.
Re:Inherent problem (Score:2)
Thought (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Thought (Score:5, Insightful)
I've always wondered if there is a plan for preserving the original landing sites: landers, footprints, everything.
The sites have huge potential for tourism in the future (think next couple hundred years), and tracking them up with all our new footprints just won't do.
I suppose a crane could be brought in to drop a big protective dome over the whole area, put in observation catwalks, and such like. Turn the place over to the Parks Service.
Re:Thought (Score:2)
-
interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
1) the the last few decades material sciences has advanced a lot, for example I believe that the amount of titatium and composite materials being used today is a lot more than the lunar lander.
2) if we are worried about the effect of radiation, vacuum, etc on space structures - we really don't need to look at the lander: an astronaunt can just walk outside of the space station (provided a functional
This is a great idea, until.... (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, this is exactly what we need... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah, this is exactly what we need... (Score:5, Funny)
Proposal... (Score:4, Funny)
Only for astronauts who demand better things in life.
Re:Proposal... (Score:5, Interesting)
thanks sinner you gave me an idea.
maybe this sounds stupid, but wouldn't it be possible to make the base a giant sphere? essentially a hamster ball.
Two spheres really. An external sphere in contact with the moon's surface and a free-floating internal sphere - with the living quarters and such.
how to keep it floating? well, first we need a nuclear power plant (but of course). then we could find good use from our good old friend magnetism [sci.kun.nl]...or whatever.
then, drive it the same way a hamster drives his ball; create an magnetic impulse between the internal and external sphere. the internal sphere will try to climb the inner-wall of the external sphere and the external sphere will counter with an equal and opposite reaction which will result in forward movement. Nuclear meltdown aside, it sounds like a relatively simple concept. and it's bound to have less moving parts than some trackless-locomotive or star-wars-power-droid-lookin' [starwars.jp] hundred legged breakdown-machine.
Re:Proposal... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Proposal... (Score:2)
It's been done. (Score:3, Funny)
NASA Ames... (Score:2, Insightful)
Needless to say my confidence in the place dropped a few points. But maybe they could get a walking moon-base up and
AAA (Score:5, Funny)
In my database (Score:2)
What if... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What if... (Score:2)
A robotic scout could go first and test difficult terrain to see if the base can handle it.
Problem Solved (Score:2)
Oh, and food. They'd need food as well.
Re:Problem Solved (Score:2)
You know you're reading Slashdot when... (Score:4, Funny)
Mobile base breaking down? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Mobile base breaking down? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Mobile base breaking down? (Score:4, Insightful)
Now if you are moving your whole base around, if an axle breaks, you are now stuck in that spot until/if repairs are made, but you still have your food, water and air generating/recycling equipment with you. everyone lives. Big plus.
They already have a "mobile lunar base" (Score:2, Funny)
Didn't they already try that? (Obg. Simpsons Ref) (Score:2)
"The real humans won't, er, wo -- won't burn quite so fast"
Astronaut flambé anyone?
(PS: First person to mention lack of oxygen on the moon gets kicked in the head)
Re:Didn't they already try that? (Obg. Simpsons Re (Score:2)
Is NASA lost? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Is NASA lost? (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem is that the "next big thing" costs a lot of money. Think in terms of $1E12 to $3E12. Thats where preliminary Mars Mission estimates hit. Bush announced his plans for the Mars mission, then offered to give them an extra $1E7 to $1E8 over the next ten years to pull it off. I see no less than 3 orders of magnitude shortfall.
Think that number is out of line? Wiki mentions $1E10 as the 1994 cost of Apollo. Though not listed at Wiki, I would expect the Shuttle program cost somewhere in the $1E11 range. Given inflation of both costs and expectations, $1E12 is a good target for the next likely Big Thing.
With the retaliatory action in Afghanistan and the personal vendetta persued in Iraq, along with a not-red-hot-bubble-driven-economy tax base, we're back in the red by $5E11 a year, and still owe $7E12.
NASA doesnt seem to have vision because there's really no money to do a marquis program properly. They're trying to start a high profile program, funded by scraping the sides of the financial pudding bowl. It just isn't going to work. Gee Whiz is expensive - it always has been. Now that we pay for overhead and profit of corporations in addition to the research and development, its even more expensive than it used to be.
NASA hasn't lost it focus, it's been beaten out of them. How much would you expect to spend for the next Hollywood super-blockbuster? I'll give you a budget of $750,000. And I want three films. And amazing special effects - stuff never done before. Throw in a couple of name actors, too - that'll help the marketing. You'd start putting together Blair Witch Project ideas, too, faced with that kind of scenerio.
Mobile? (Score:2)
Re:Mobile? (Score:4, Funny)
Shouldn't they first set up a mobile base on the moon before worrying about a permenant one? That plus a vehicle would provide good coverage until they can learn a little more about establishing a base on the moon.
Don't know bout you, but... (Score:2)
Of course, if they were to "bug out" a la M*A*S*H, it'd be easy to track them in the lunar dust. And I'd be just a wee bit testy, too.
The Russian version isn't mobile... (Score:2)
In Soviet Russia, they did this in 1970 (Score:4, Informative)
References for Mobile Lunar Base Papers (Score:3, Informative)
I found these references at AeroSpace Architecture Publications [cuhk.edu.hk]:
Cohen, Marc M. (2003 September). Mobile Lunar and Planetary Base Architectures (AIAA 2003-6280). AIAA Space 2003 Conference & Exposition, Long Beach, California, USA, 23-25 September 2003. Reston, Virginia, USA: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Link to on-line order forms [aiaa.org]
Cohen, Marc M. (2004 February). "Mobile Lunar Base Concepts." In M. S. El-Genk (Ed.), Space Technology and Applications International Forum - STAIF 2004: Conference on Thermophysics in Microgravity; Conference on Commercial/Civil Next Generation Space Transportation; 21st Symposium on Space Nuclear Power and Propulsion; Conference on Human Space Exploration; 2nd Symposium on Space Colonization; 1st Symposium on New Frontiers and Future Concepts (p. 845-853). Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA, 8-11 February 2004. College Park, Maryland, USA: American Institute of Physics. Link to on-line order forms [aip.org]
Space Camp Fantasies- (Score:2, Interesting)
Now that I've established my expert credentials: If you're going to be on an energy budget there are almost certainly going to be higher priorities than the energy required to lug everything around. Orders of magnitude difference- think of all the other things you could be doing.
Pick a good
Department of Redundancy Department (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Department of Redundancy Department (Score:3, Insightful)
That's fine and all, but what happens when only one rescue crew is traveling to a remote place? A second rescue crew might travel with the first...but what if the second rescue crew runs into a problem, too? Well, that means a third rescue crew...
God, I'm such an asshat
(OT) Re:Department of Redundancy Department (Score:2)
Yea but I have a feeling Department of Redundancy Department dates back to the days before Slashdot...you insensitive clod!
Pictures (Score:5, Informative)
MOBITAT [nasa.gov]
HABOT [nasa.gov]
What are they smoking? (Score:5, Funny)
Hell, even Lunabago would be better than those monstrosities!
-
Obligatory pictures (Score:5, Informative)
"Habot" mobile lunary base [nasa.gov]
Mobitat (mobile lander?) [nasa.gov]
Does anybody know if scientists in Antartica use mobile habitats? If they do, then this would seem much more plausible.
White Trash! (Score:5, Funny)
Don't you see the real point of this.
The US creates a trailer park on the moon and ships up all their trailer trash.
Leave 'em for a few years and let natural selection work things out. Pretty soon the moon will be overrun with mutants that can shoot a stop sign with deadly accuracy from a mile away.
It Science gone mad I tell you.
An endless string of "what ifs." (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:An endless string of "what ifs." (Score:3, Insightful)
ARC has some bored scientists (Score:2, Offtopic)
"Yeah, man.. that Moon-Winnebago thing is pretty out there.."
*sound of snickering*
Houston, we have a problem... (Score:2, Funny)
What if the base has a problem? that means a second base...
Problem in one word: (Score:5, Interesting)
Sheilding!
You don't have the earth to protect from all those evil sunspots, misc radiation sources, and micrometorites. A mobile base would have to manufacture it's sheilding on earth and ship it (at extrodinary cost) to the moon.
A static base can just pile up moon dirt on it's self. (or just give the astronots a shovel!)
I always loved the reason that Joss Weadon gave in fire fly for why the future looked more like a western. It's the frontier stoopid. Resources are rare, machines break down, and simple works just fine. If you ship 2 motor bikes to a remote planet you will only have 2 motor bikes, but if you ship two horses... Of course this is the moon, not the wild wild planet, however the basic idea aplies. KISS
Re:Problem in one word: (Score:3, Interesting)
I like the idea of motor bikes, but I always thougth that some Segways with oversized wheels would be ideal, given that space suits have pretty limited flexilibity. Plus the things are at least doubly redundant in the commercial version: imagine one
Nonsense (Score:4, Insightful)
Is it just me? (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Unpressurized rovers can't go too far because the astronauts will be limited by the air supply in their suits, so pressurized rovers that can go further are better.
Okay, good so far. On to the next part of the idea.
2. If something goes wrong with the rover, the guys inside are screwed. Being stranded on the moon with no AAA roadside assistance really sucks, so there should be two rovers.
Hm. Maybe, but you've just doubled the resources needed to go look into something. If this logic had been followed before, we'd never have made it to the moon in the first place. At some point you need to just accept that setting up a base of operations on the moon HAS to involve risk. Why not have redundant systems on the rover instead of two rovers? But it really goes off the tracks here...
3. But what if something happens to both rovers? You really need three!
Wait, now...someone didn't pay attention in statistics class. If there's a 1% chance of the first rover failing, then the chance of two rovers failing isn't
4. So just get rid of the rovers, and stick with one big mobile moonbase!
Okay, so now what you've done is gotten rid of the rovers, only to make the whole base just one big rover itself, or a whole group of interdependent rovers? And this is more reliable HOW? It seems to me that it takes the challenge of a moonbase and adds complexity to it. Not only do the pieces have to fit together to form a secure and reliable habitat, now they have to withstand coupling and uncoupling, as well as the challenge of mating when the respective pieces might not be exactly aligned due to terrain. So I'm thinking this guy is a little more into astrophysics and a little less into simple common-sense engineering than he should be. Thoughts, anyone?
Those are big rovers NOT mobile bases (Score:5, Interesting)
A base should, by any reasonable designation hold at least a dozen people, these units look like they each hold 1-3 people, max. So they have a docking tunnel, big deal. They are still rovers, not mobile bases. A fleet of mobile bases (like in the Habot pic) will need a shirt-sleeve environment for maintenance, guaranteed. Hence, any schema like this will end up basing from a buried garage/base of some kind. The units might make sense for exploration, especially if the units can lift, fly to a new area to explore, then fly back to a main base.
Others have already mentioned it, but shielding on the moon is a critical issue. Even with the tanks mounted above, a user of one of these steroid-Rovers is going to get an unhealthy dose of radiation. This kind of setup would probably require a buried, rad-safe base to retreat to.
The Mobitat uses a modified version of the Mars rover "rocker-bogey" suspension - it's good to see that NASA will keep using what has turned into a very successful design.
The Habot is, IMHO, totally impractical. The "walker" legs would be a maintenance nightmare in the lunar environment. The fines (very small particles) on the moon are abrasive and static-charged. The particles find their way into anything - the Apollo suits were breaking down after a few days exposure. Sealing the joints on those legs is going to prove futile - wheels have similar problems but not nearly as complex.
Cute viewgraphs, I'm waiting for a private base.
Build lunar base.
do something.
profit!
Josh
But of course! (Score:3, Funny)
Here's an idea, lets take the big mobile base design and scale it down. Then it could leave the base with say, one or two people in it and cruise around. Surely these little bases would be less prone to failure than the big base. We could call them Rovers!
Re:Mars for me. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:But what happens if... (Score:2)