Moon Swirls May Inspire Revolution In the Science of Deflector Shields 76
KentuckyFC (1144503) writes 'One curious feature on the Moon's surface are "lunar swirls", wisp-like regions that are whiter than surrounding areas and that, until recently, astronomers could not explain. But one team of physicists recently showed that these areas are protected by weak magnetic fields that deflect high energy particles from the Sun and so prevent the darkening effect this radiation has. The problem they had to solve was how a weak field could offer so much protection, when numerous studies of long duration spaceflight have shown that only very powerful fields can act like radiation shields. The team now says that these previous studies have failed to take into account an important factor: the low density plasma that exists in space. It turns out that this plasma is swept up by a weak magnetic field moving through space, creating a layer of higher density plasma. That's important because the separation of charge within this layer creates an electric field. And it is this field that deflects the high energy particles from the Sun. That explains the lunar swirls but it also suggests that the same effect could be exploited to protect astronauts on long duration missions to the moon, to nearby asteroids and beyond. This team has now produced the first study of such a shield and how it might work. Their shield would use superconducting coils to create a relatively weak field only when it is needed, during solar storms, for example. And it would create a plasma by pumping xenon into the vacuum around the vehicle, where it would be ionised by UV light. The entire device would weigh around 1.5 tonnes and use about 20 KW of power. That's probably more than mission planners could currently accommodate but it is significantly less than the science fiction-type power requirements of previous designs. And who knows what other tricks of plasma physics engineers might be able to exploit to refine this design. All of a sudden, long duration space flight looks a little more feasible.'
Other uses. (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Other uses. (Score:5, Funny)
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What are you? Romulan?
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More importantly, can we reconfigure it to emit a tachyon pulse?
Probably not, but I'd lay odds we could manage to get a coherent graviton beam out of it.
20KW? Sounds to me like the Elephant In The Room is a small on-board nuclear reactor to power the craft.
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Fission reactors would actually be better in this application because the mass of the fuel and shielding can be used as a 'safe room' in case the deflector field fails. And besides, they exist.
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Yeah my first question was whether or not it would be strong enough to repel the Romulan's attacks.
Look. Polarizing the hull plating was good enough for grandad. It's good enoug
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Sure, just make sure to use torpedoes instead of phasers if entering a wormhole when there's an engine imbalance
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Or how about the holodeck.
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...couldn't this sort of principle be used in a weaker sense to help with incoming ionizing radiation? Micrometeorites are a concern, but so is long-term exposure to radiation for astronauts.
The shield described in the article is already "used in a weaker sense": it would only deflect charged atomic-scale particles (ionizing radiation), with no effect on micrometeorites.
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micro meteorites are easily dealt with via whipple bumper shields, just thin layers of sheet metal with some aramid fiber backing. The ultra high relative velocity of a strike, results in the shield and the micrometeorite vaporising into a diffuse spray of plasma, that is soaked up by the backing.
TV and Movies have kind of done a great disservice in portraying micrometeorites as things with ultra-high penetration, when in reality it is the exact opposite. The energy gradients involved in a low mass hyp
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Technically meteorites are the parts of metors that make it to the Earth's surface. So micro or macro, meteorites are not a problem for space vehicles.
Weak magnetic fields on the moon. (Score:1)
Isn't anyone curious what exactly is generating the magnetic fields on the moon?
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I bet ICP would like to know...
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HA!
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Just wondering why would Mars lose its oxygen and hydrogen to solar wind if such a small magnetic field can provide such big deflections?
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Re:Weak magnetic fields on the moon. (Score:5, Interesting)
Educated guess:
Iron deposits. When exposed to a moving charged particles, say, solar wind, iron very slowly begins to magnetize, as individual electron spins are pushed very gently into alignment with their neighbors. We exploit this much more vigorously in the purposeful creation of permanent magnets here on earth.
I can't even begin to imagine how impossibly long it must have taken to happen on the moon.
Or another theory: it's magneto's secret moon base.
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most of it is believed to be left over from the early time when Moon still had molten core and a dynamo similar to what the Earth still has.
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If you put a scientific problem in front of engineers, they'll tell you it can be done when it can't.
Get the right people on the right job.
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Well of course it can be done.
You just might not like the price tag.
Reminds me of how servo tabs work (Score:3)
Back in the days when they couldn't outfit a plane with hydraulic actuators, they'd use a servo tab [wikipedia.org] instead. Without hydraulics, all the force to move a control surface had to come from the pilot, which became a problem when the larger control surfaces like the elevator required several hundred pounds of force to move it.
The servo tab was a small flap at the end of the control surface (usually the elevator). It would deflect the airflow at the tail end of the elevator, causing the elevator surface to move in the desired direction, causing the elevator to deflect air in the opposite direction of the servo tab, causing the plane to pitch. In effect, the pilot only has to move a small control surface; the effect of the wind on that small surface would move the larger control surface for him. The MD-80 is probably the most common aircraft people are familiar with which uses servo tabs (it uses minimal hydraulics).
Next up: We need a centrifuge in orbit! (Score:4, Interesting)
That's great! (No really: I'm not being sarcastic, that gets rid of one of the two great barriers to deep space travel and living on all the planets not-as-large-as-the-earth).
The other BIG problem is: What level of gravity do humans need to THRIVE for long periods of time? (That is so that they do not suffer from bone density loss, cardio-muscular problems, etc.) Is it 1/6 gee (moon)? 1/3 gee (mars)? Or will humans need a full 1 gee to live and, eventually, safely REPRODUCE?
If the answer is humans need a full gee, then we might as well just resign ourselves to limiting our trips into the solar system to quick jaunts and robotic explorers. (While you *might* convince colonists to spend say an hour a day doing exercises to maintain their health, no way would you be able to make a fetus do them). We'll need to re-engineer humans before we can make a serious effort to colonize another world. (The only rocky planet with anything near our level of gravity is Venus and it is a hellhole). That's why the loss of the centrifuge planned for the ISS that would examine the effects of "partial gravity" (as opposed to the "micro-gravity" the ISS currently has or the regular gravity that we have) on biological systems was so disappointing. Literally it would have told us whether or not colonization of space was really feasible in the near future. (It probably wasn't going to be big enough to hold people but just seeing how partial gravity affected laboratory mice would go a long way to answering these questions).
Perhaps if we can dump the Ruskies, with the money saved with using Space-X's rockets we could build a decent centrifuge to make these (literally) VITAL studies. Maybe we don't even need to attach it to the ISS; just take two of Bigelow's(?) inflatable habs, add a cable and spin! (Just by changing the cable length you could alter the g-forces so no additional propulsion other than the initial thrusting would be required). But that's the deluxe model, you could just take the Dragon capsule and have a cable attached to its spent second stage and spin THAT (the center of gravity might not be in the "middle" but it should work fine). Keep it in orbit for a few generations of mice and dissect them when they return.
While we're at it, we should probably look into circadian rhythms... (but maybe mars, with it's 24-1/2 hour "day" is close enough).
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mass doesn't work that way. the whole asteroid belt is perhaps a tenth of the mass of earth.
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Perhaps if we can dump the Ruskies...
Actually, when it comes to the ISS, the "ruskies" might decide to dump the US first (at least the Russians claim that, "The Russian segment can exist independently from the American one. The U.S. one cannot."). Apparently Russia has already "banned" the US from using their RD-180 engines which power the Atlas V rockets used to launch our military satellites as a consequence of this Ukraine tiff...
Perhaps you are unaware of how much regression has occurred the US space program. You talk about the science o
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In the long run, I think we will re-engineer humans for space.
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Planetary surface colonization is only a romantic sci fi fantasy. It would be much much easier to construct and equip rotating space stations than to colonize planetary surfaces.
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Well, not necessarily. If we can integrate gravity into the GUT, we may be able to create and manipulate gravitational fields like we do with electricity and magnetism. But that's also assuming that the mechanism for creating and controlling such fields isn't prohibitive which is a pretty big assumption.
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If the answer is humans need a full gee, then we might as well just resign ourselves to limiting our trips into the solar system to quick jaunts and robotic explorers.
Disagree. Large-scale habitats/SPS/O'Neill Colonies have always been the best option. No huge gravity wells to deal with, since rotation provides your G's, and, while they are extraordinarily expensive, they cost nothing compared to a full-scale terraforming effort, and can provide a shirt-sleeve environment in basically no time flat. The one remaining big knock on them was the issue of radiation shielding, and now, that may be solved.
might inspire revolution ... (Score:2)
... but then again, they might not.
Is this a weaker version of Betteridge's law?
Weasel words (Score:1)
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Weasels absorb radiation
minimagnetospheres.org (Score:2)
The cited paper refers to http://www.minimagnetospheres.org/ [minimagnetospheres.org], which has some interesting detail on the concept.
Cosmic rays (Score:3)
Protecting from solar radiation is great, but i understand that the greater threat is cosmic rays. Solar radiation is somewhat easy to block, because you just put a light element shield, like hydrogen tanks, between the astronauts and the sun.
Cosmic rays are much harder to shield from because they are so high energy. They also come from everywhere, so require a omnidirectional shield.
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Whiter means less radiation?? (Score:1)
Don't things on Earth left to bask in the sun's radiation turn white and lose pigmentation? Rather than gain it?
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Not everything. My skin does exactly the opposite. There may be a specific process at work with the lunar regolite.
An Aside: " ... recently could not explain." (Score:2)
Just an aside about the statement ending " .... that, until recently, astronomers could not explain."
There's a lot of stuff like that in science. There are even things that we don't know that we don't know about.
That should give a person pause for thought the next time they hear some scientist or engineer speaking definitively about some proposed solution to disease, the economy, and especially climate change.
The more grandiose and definitive the idea, the more likely it is vulnerable to what isn't yet kno