Spacecraft, Heal Thyself 112
carpdeus writes "The European Space Agency, citing the fact that we don't glue ourselves together when we nick ourselves, has funded a study toward creating a spacecraft that could fix itself. By replacing a few of the fibers in the resinous material that make up a spacecraft's skin with hollow fibers containing adhesive, the material has a chance to fix itself when it encounters minor damage, much the way our skin does when blood wells up and clots. While admittedly years away, such material makes longer duration missions a possibility."
Ben Rothlisburger there done that (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Ben Rothlisburger there done that (Score:1)
I'm sure it's not just me in this respect- but it still doesn't make sense. If anyone would care to explain,
Re:Ben Rothlisburger there done that (Score:1)
What about the guts? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:1)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's like having a firewall that requires you to get successfully attacked before it decides whether or not to put a stop to the traffic.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:1)
A harder skin may be too brittle and or too heavy.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:5, Informative)
The idea is to prevent small cracks from developing due to micro imperfections in the material, stresses imposed during flight, small-scale impacts, etc.
If small cracks form, they can then grow and propagate while in flight possibly leading to catastrophic failure.
The material is a composite reinforced with fiber "A" (could be carbon fibers, kevlar, whatever). It has specific strength requirements. The idea behind this technology is to fill this composite with a SMALL amount of hollow glass fibers. They would obviously design it such that the small addition of hollow glass fibers do NOT affect the overall strength of the material in a significant way. The addition of these hollow fibers however, allows for some resin to be stored and release during breakage of the fibers thus reacting chemically with the matrix to seal the crack tip and prevent propagation.
What they would need to do is make sure these hollow glass fibers are properly dispersed in the matrix.
Keep in mind that you can't just "make" the composite out of the resin that they are storing in the glass fibers. This chemical, whatever it is, would need to react with the matrix and "re-polymerize" sealing the crack tip. By itself, this chemical agent stored in the hollow glass-fibers would not be usefull at all to actually make the composite.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:1)
ok ok maybe not jbweld, but the idea still holds water. (so will jbweld, i know, i used it on my leaky coolant pipe in my car)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:1)
IOW, just build it strong in the first place.
I was thinking it would be something more like a circulatory system. Suppose that you don't know in advance which parts of the spacecraft will undergo stress. To ensure mission success you would have to
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
Make it double-layered and you're on to a winner.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
No, in fact that would make no sense.
No material currently known can withstand being hit by a solid object hurtling through space at maybe 50% the speed of light.
Currently, only possibility seems to be repairing the damage after it has been done. This happens to be a solution for self-repair, rather than requiring someone to g
Re:What about the guts? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What about the guts? (Score:1)
I was considering deep-space probes, not space shuttles. The shuttle reentry heat dissapation issues probably greatly limit what materials can be used in the outer shell. Thus, self-sealing goo is probably not appropriate there. Unmanned probes usually don't have to worry about reentry heat.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
Or use a bamboo mat but call it processed cellulose armor.
On a less serious note there is a metal/polymer composite that NASA paid to have researched and it worked. Where is it?
Successful research does not garner future funds.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
A hull tough enough to not be punctured by debris will not exist. There is no abrasion in space - it's all puncture and heat expansion / cool contraction that causes problems.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:3, Insightful)
You are correct. I used to work at Hughes. The spacecraft structure is made out of graphite honeycomb panels in a six sided structure, three panels for payload electronics, three panels for satellite bus electronics.. They are very light and can sustain lots of damage and still keep their strength. I am not aware of a spacecraft ever failing in the way suggested by the article. There might be an application for the material, but it ain't spacecraft.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
And, yes, I am a rocket scientist.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:2)
I thought that was a problem with the solar panel mounts and not the actual structure of the vehicle. It caused them to aerobrake more slowly than planned I think.
Re:What about the guts? (Score:1)
MOD PARENT UP, informative (Score:3, Insightful)
Agreed, I'm a "rocket scientist", (kind of, work with commercial satellites). The most common failure in spacecraft is electrostatic discharge. The best way to invest your money if you want to reduce failure rates in equipment in space is to invent better grounding systems.
In the vacuum of space, electrostatic charges build up as the effect of charged particles emitted by the sun that hit the spacecraft. Since there is no air to
Re:MOD PARENT UP, informative (Score:1)
Re:MOD PARENT UP, informative (Score:2)
A good question. Some Russian satellites that are pressurized, but I believe that's more to save something in testing. When a satellite is manufactured, one of the major costs is in the thermo-vacuum testing. The satellite must be put in a vacuum chamber with electric lights emulating the sun for extended periods. If the whole satellite is pressurized, these tests can be done in a much simpler way.
The satellites that are most resistant to electric d
Re:MOD PARENT UP, informative (Score:2)
Re:MOD PARENT UP, informative (Score:1)
Man this is why I read slashdot. I've been reading it for a while now, and to have somebody say: Agreed, I'm a "rocket scientist", (kind of, work with commercial satellites). It makes this site so amazing. I reckon that when slashdot started they'd never have even imagined having rocket scientists reply to rocket-science related articles.
But mind you, it does raise a good point about two things - the micro failure fix-speed is probably too slow for anything critical, and that anything
Self-Healing Mechanism is Nifty (Score:2)
What is even more interesting is that the proposed self-healing mechanism is similar to that used in tires which Sears once sold (still sells?). If a nail punctured the tread of one of these tires, a gooey liquid would ooze out of the hole. Exposure to air caused the liquid to quickly solidify, plugging up the hole.
I tried to search for more information about those
Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:4, Interesting)
We haven't done a lot of long duration spaceflight yet. As the larger-than-expected particles collected by the Stardust mission show, cumulative minor damage could be a major issue for flights lasting years, so I'd say yes, it will be useful.
Re:Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:1)
Re:Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:1)
Re:Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:1)
Re:Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:2)
Re:Interesting, but is it really Practical (Score:1)
Self-Healing Metal (Score:4, Funny)
"I happened to notice when I put that piece of foil in that box, and the damn thing just started unfolding and just flattened out. Then I got to playing with it. I'd fold it, crease it, lay it down and it'd unfold. It's kinda wierd. I couldn't tear it. The color was in between tinfoil and lead foil, about the thickness of lead foil."
From: http://www.qsl.net/w5www/roswell.html [qsl.net]
(about 1/2 way down - use CTRL+F)
Adeptus
Nonono. They need to ask the BBC! (Score:2)
Weight? (Score:1, Interesting)
Would the excess weight requirement make this not practical?
Re:Weight? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Weight? (Score:2)
just take the side that will be pointed forward most of the time.
Re:Weight? (Score:2)
Re:Weight? (Score:2)
Re:Weight? (Score:2)
Um...
Now this is promising... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Now this is promising... (Score:1)
Re:Now this is promising... (Score:1)
That's just what I need, my iPod to release glue in my pockets everytime my keys rub up against it. It's bad enough when the caps slip off of pens which then leak ink.
Just think... (Score:2)
Fifty years of sci-fi get rewritten (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Fifty years of sci-fi get rewritten (Score:2)
Re:Fifty years of sci-fi get rewritten (Score:2)
Most Sci-Fi doesn't even consider the problems of micrometeorites. It's only in the last ten years or so that we see "repair the shell or die from asphyxiation" scenes, and those are something that we'll still want to be able to repair.
And, FWIW, serious structural damage and equipment failure will still require potential EVAs.
Space topic (Score:1)
Re:Space topic (Score:1)
Obligatory Timothy Zahn quote... (Score:2)
He set to work with his squeeze tubes again. "I'll never understand about that stuff," Shawn commented. "If it's so good at fixing hull cracks and ridges, why not coat the whole hull with it?"
Seems like Sci-Fi writers believe we'll still have problems even a few hundred years in the future!
Colonizing the galaxy (Score:3, Interesting)
This again raises the concept of Gaia. Isn't the Earth itself just a big living spaceship? If we want to travel beyond our solar system, we ought to build something like Earth, only smaller.
This idea has been well-represented [wikipedia.org] in sci-fi for decades.
Re:Colonizing the galaxy (Score:2)
If we want to travel beyond our solar system, we ought to build something like Earth, only smaller.
Hmm.. you mean like Mars?
Re:Colonizing the galaxy (Score:1)
Wait a sec the earth is a satellite of the sun, not a spaceship. It is like it is because it tends to stay a relatively constant distance from the Sun (climate) and because it is the size that it is (gravity) (among other things of course, like chemical composition and age)
Maybe we should strap rockets to the earth and the sun and just take off into the cosmos.
(i can't believe i felt compelled to write this - am i stating the obvious or missing the point. Doh, no idea)
Re:Colonizing the galaxy (Score:2)
You can picture a spacecraft as acting like a living system. It consumes food (fuel), it has intelligence (programming), it can be trained (remote control), etc. How switching to some organic based system is going to help is beyond me. Where's the propulsion going to come from? Whats it going to eat? What happens in case of a contamination?
Would you rather drive somewhere or ride a horse there?
Re:Colonizing the galaxy (Score:2)
Uhh, no. The solar system is the big living spaceship. The Earth wouldn't be "living" at all if seperated from The Sun for a while.
Much smaller, and its gravity wouldn't be enough to prevent the atmosphere from escaping into space.
At it's current size, it's of course far too unweildy to be a very useful space-ship...
The "giant rock" spaceship isn't an entire
If only we could just heal Slashdot's DUPE problem (Score:4, Insightful)
And my, what an old dupe it is!
Re:If only we could just heal Slashdot's DUPE prob (Score:1)
Re:If only we could just heal Slashdot's DUPE prob (Score:1)
Re:If only we could just heal Slashdot's DUPE prob (Score:2)
Re:If only we could just heal Slashdot's DUPE prob (Score:2)
After a minor auto-repair (Score:3, Funny)
Kent Brockman: Well, this reporter was...possibly a little hasty earlier and would like to...reaffirm his allegiance to this country and its human president. May not be perfect, but it's still the best government we have. For now.
[notices "HAIL ANTS" sign taped up, tears it down]
Oh, yes, by the way, the spacecraft still in extreme danger, may not make it back, attempting risky reentry, bla bla bla bla bla bla. We'll see you after the movie.
More like a self-sealing fuel tanks (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh shit... (Score:2, Funny)
"Fact?" (Score:4, Informative)
I'm not sure if they're trying to say that our bodies don't naturally [fi.edu] glue themselves back together or that we don't apply glue [kk.org] to cuts, but either way, they're wrong.
Re:"Fact?" (Score:1)
Not only that, but they are, in fact, proposing that the ship glue itself back together. The blurb is a poorly chosen edit of an already rather vague statement by a scientist whose first language is probably german.What the blurb fails to get across is the important point that we don't glue ourselves together manually.
Re:"Fact?" (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:"Fact?" (Score:2)
The latter. I agree it was poorly worded, but not wrong.
Your link is off-topic, which is why you are wrong. They said "when we nick ourselves" not "when we rip off limbs" or "rip large chunks of skin away".
It is referring to the fact that your body develops scabs, and heals itself, as opposed to just remaining damaged until somebody comes along and fixes your cuts in the case of machines (or anemics).
The real problem is radiation/cosmic rays (Score:2, Interesting)
Porsche (Score:4, Funny)
"That's the Germans for you," he said. "Everything they make turns into something else in case there's a war..."
Re:Porsche (Score:2, Funny)
Niles:
It probably needs more power than my building's old wiring can
give it.
Martin: Leave it to the Germans. Even their appliances crave power.
Well at least... (Score:1)
Self healing plastic (Score:2, Funny)
Help! I can't see! (Score:2)
Bioships (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps this is the first step towards bioships, à la species 8472 [wikipedia.org]? As well as the ability to heal themselves, I've often thought that deep space vehicles should be able to actively find fuel and even to reproduce. This is largely based on the notion of interstellar unmanned probes, which have to be intelligent enough to make decisions on their own. The best way to do this may be to make use of the amazing systems which Evolution (or the Creator) have provided us with, and have biological elements in our probes. Of course there are serious ethical questions we must ask ourselves before beginning such an endeavour, but this is something to take seriously.
Astrochicken! (Score:1)
Re:Bioships (Score:1)
Bad analogy (Score:2)
Rather than have the spacecraft glue itself, let's have the spacecraft ... uh ... glue itself?
Cells reproduce. To bring that technology to spacecraft, the spacecraft would either have to be biologically engineered or constructed solely (the self-healing part, anyway) of a mass of nanomachines
I. P. Freely (Score:2, Insightful)
And they're using adhesives to mimick the way our skin heals itself?
Now in space station sized (Score:4, Funny)
How would it work? (Score:3, Interesting)
I can make two guesses, either it hardens in the presence of oxygen (or something else in the air), which won't work in space, or it remains liquid under pressure and hardens once the pressure eases (eg it has sprung a leak). The pressure thing would result in the whole lot hardening once a hole occured, which still wouldn't work.
hmmmm....
Easy! (Score:2)
Lexx is on its way! (Score:2)
Or... (Score:2)
That should give you plenty of time to reach the next starbase.
self-repairing fibers (Score:1)