NASA Habitat Competition Looks For Bioregenerative Space Greenhouses
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[QUOTE]Future astronauts en route to Mars or deep-space destinations will need specially designed living quarters and renewable sources of food — so this year’s X-Hab Challenge includes a remotely operated, robotically controlled space garden. Students at the University of Colorado and Colorado State University are developing a workable prototype “bioregenerative food system,” which they’ll deliver to NASA next summer.
NASA’s yearly X-Hab competition invites university teams to design deep space habitats and concepts that could someday be used by real astronauts. The designs often focus on space-worthy structural scaffolds, detailing vertical or horizontal building layouts that could survive the harsh environment on Mars or the moon. This year’s contest includes a robotic garden, too.
The completed project will be able to grow, harvest and compost a variety of plants which astronauts can cultivate for food. The plants would also purify water and provide oxygen. It will give isolated, lonely space travelers something to do, as well as something to take care of — the responsibility can be a psychological boost, according to the CU students. Choosing which tasks to automate and which to do manually, like picking the fruit, are part of the project, according to aerospace engineering sciences graduate student Christine Fanchiang, who is co-leading the Colorado team’s effort.
The team already has a working aeroponic prototype, which they plan to build upon with their $40,000 X-Hab grant during the next year. The system will eventually be able to plant seeds, monitor plant growth, harvest the plants and even process crop waste, recycling nutrients back into the system.
This year’s five teams, announced in late May, also include California State Polytechnic University and Oklahoma State University, whose teams will work on vertical and horizontal habitat layout designs; Texas A&M University, which will work on a wireless “Smart Plug” for DC power supply; and the University of Alabama-Huntsville, whose team is designing a microgravity storage system.
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Source: [url]http://www.popsci.com/technology/article/2012-06/nasas-latest-space-habitat-competition-homes-living-space-and-astro-greenhouses[/url]
When I was in elementary school I drew a picture of a house on the moon. Do you think I will be able to submit it to NASA?
We live in the future.
Would biodomes be suitable enough? They'd need to be plenty durable against sandstorms and the threat of cosmic radiation, that much I can say.
I think I'm friends with the guys working on the project here in Colorado, he and some friends are working on an automated hydroponics system. Might not be the same thing but he never told me the reason behind the project. I'll have to ask about this next time I see him.
Fuck yeah, I live in Boulder. We do crazy shit like this all the time up at NCAR, the Uni, and of course NOAA, and it's just a pretty place to live. Admittedly 40,000+ acres are on fire at the moment but hey, can't be perfect in everything, can we?
[QUOTE=ironman17;36305537]Would biodomes be suitable enough? They'd need to be plenty durable against sandstorms and the threat of cosmic radiation, that much I can say.[/QUOTE]
I don't even know why people immediately think of domes for space habitats. They're an engineering nightmare, they break easily and it's very difficult to insulate/shield them properly.
Modular geometric shapes would be far easier to produce, repair, and would last us a lot longer than a bunch of crummy domes.
[QUOTE=DireAvenger;36309991]I don't even know why people immediately think of domes for space habitats. They're an engineering nightmare, they break easily and it's very difficult to insulate/shield them properly.
Modular geometric shapes would be far easier to produce, repair, and would last us a lot longer than a bunch of crummy domes.[/QUOTE]
I want an icosahedron shaped dome.
[QUOTE=Emperor Scorpious II;36310564]I want an icosahedron shaped dome.[/QUOTE]Bah, we should have it shaped as a great dirhombicosidodecahedron.
I prefer triangles
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