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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Bigelow shoots for the moon

Posted: Thursday, February 22, 2007 6:36 PM by Alan Boyle


Bigelow Aerospace
An artist's conception shows a Bigelow Aerospace complex in Earth orbit. Such a
station could serve as the precursor for prefabricated lunar bases after 2020.

Even as Bigelow Aerospace gears up for launching its second prototype space station into orbit, the company has set its sights on something much, much bigger: a project to assemble full-blown space villages at a work site between Earth and the moon, then drop them to the lunar surface, ready for immediate move-in.

In an exclusive interview this week, Las Vegas billionaire Robert Bigelow confirmed that his company has been talking about the concept with NASA – and that the first earthly tests of the techniques involved would take place later this year. The scenario he sketched out would essentially make Bigelow a general contractor for the final frontier.

That role would be a good fit for Bigelow, who made his fortune in the real estate, hotel and construction business and is now focused on developing inflatable modules (or as he prefers to call them, "expandable systems") that can serve as the building blocks for orbital living complexes.

The first big step down that path came in July, when a Russian booster put Bigelow's Genesis 1 prototype module into orbit. Bigelow has said even he was surprised by the success of that mission, and he has committed himself to spending hundreds of millions of dollars to follow up on that first launch.

The next test module, Genesis 2, is due for launch in April – with a larger prototype, known as Galaxy, tentatively scheduled for liftoff next year. Bigelow's plan calls for launching the company's first space "hotel" capable of accommodating guests (or researchers, for that matter) in 2010.

Getting all that right is "Job One," Bigelow told me. But by 2012, the focus could start shifting from low Earth orbit, or LEO, farther out into space. One of the key places in Bigelow's plan is a point about 200,000 miles (323,000 kilometers) out from Earth in the moon's direction, where the pulls of terrestrial and lunar gravity balance each other.


This diagram shows gravitational
balance points L1 through L5.
Earth and the moon are not
drawn to the orbit's scale.

Bigelow would turn that region of space, called L1, into a construction zone. Inflatable modules would be linked up with propulsion/power systems and support structures, and then the completed base would be lowered down to the moon's surface, all in one piece.

Once the moon base has been set down, dirt would be piled on top, using a technique that Bigelow plans to start testing later this year at his Las Vegas headquarters. The moon dirt, more technically known as regolith, would serve to shield the base's occupants from the harsh radiation hitting the lunar surface.

Bigelow is not alone in thinking about ways to do all this. In fact, Bigelow Aerospace arranged the interview in response to last month's story about NASA's plans for building infrastructure on the moon after 2020. At the time, NASA's Larry Toups had mentioned that the space agency was discussing its options with Bigelow as well as other aerospace companies, such as ILC Dover (which has its own inflatable-module project), Lockheed Martin and the Boeing Co.

Bigelow's latest comments bring the concept of inflatable modules full circle. NASA pioneered the technology for space habitats that could be folded up into a small space for launch, then inflated with pressurized gas after their deployment. Bigelow licensed the technology, known as the Transhab system, for his own private-sector space program – and is now working with the space agency to adapt the system for its original purpose.

That was the starting point for our interview, which appears here in full (with minor editing):

Bigelow: These expandable systems were part of NASA’s architecture for going to Mars, and then they became the architecture that NASA was going to use for the dormitory for the international space station. And of course, Congress cut the program. So these systems have applications for deep space missions as well as for missions on the moon and the surface of Mars.

We’ve had some discussions with NASA regarding lunar activities using these structures, and we’ve presented NASA with two concepts for our approach as a private company to creating a lunar base and also providing the regolith insulation protection

Cosmic Log: So those are two separate opportunities – one would be creating the base and the other would be providing that regolith protection. Am I reading that right?

Bigelow: You are. Our concepts are completely different from all the other concepts that have been kicked around about how to deploy the regolith. We have our own approach about how to create the base and the provision for gathering that lunar material and placing it over the modules. And that’s been the focus of our discussions with NASA, on just that particular subject of lunar interest.

Our company does have a lunar interest. It’s obviously secondary to our activities in low Earth orbit, which we certainly want to successfully accomplish first.

Q: I’ll definitely return to that in a second, but I did want to ask you about your approach to the base and the regolith insulation. Someone coming in from the outside might say, “Well, you just take one of those inflatable modules and you plunk that down on the lunar surface and pile moon dirt around it. It doesn’t sound that complicated.” Is the devil in the details, or is there some radically different way in which Bigelow would approach that challenge?

A: Yes, there’s a significant difference, because both of those are very significant challenges.

The regolith is made up of very, very fine, talcum-powder-type of glass particles. As you probably know, these particles are a significant abrasive, and they are able to penetrate the smallest of joints in any moving system. So what you don’t want to have, if possible, is a reliance on any moving systems to deploy that material.


AP file
Robert Bigelow meets
the press in Las Vegas.

Now, all the architectures for deploying the regolith involve some kind of conveyor belt, or a tractor or some other kind of large equipment that rolls around the surface, scoops up the material and transports it like you see on construction sites terrestrially. Usually, that type of solution is imagined because people look to construction excavation as the methodology to deal with the lunar regolith problem. Being a general contractor as we have for over 30 years, we’ve been on an awful lot of construction sites, and we’ve excavated an awful lot of material.

If people have ever been around a construction site at night, they’ll see a bunch of lights on those machines, and some service trucks there. Those service trucks aren’t there just because there’s nothing better to do than visit the machinery. It’s because that machinery breaks down constantly on Earth, all of the time. Every construction site has that feature to it.  People who have never been to construction sites are completely unaware that this is a habitual problem on Earth, let alone the moon.

The last thing you want to do is handcuff yourself to an Earth solution for moving material – a strategy that would be just crazy to apply to a lunar application. We have enough problems as it is keeping the machinery running – Caterpillars, loaders, excavators, all kinds of machinery.

So our solution is something entirely different, involving a method where no machinery actually is used. We’re going to be trying the method this year, using one of our steel simulators as a prototype, because it’s the size of vessel that mimics the full-scale module. We’re actually going to try in Las Vegas to apply our solution for covering up a full-scale module, involving only two people, with a depth of soil on the crown of at least 2 or 3 feet. We’ll give you more on this later as we progress with this experiment.

Q: You don’t want to go into detail on the particular strategy involved?

A: Well, part of it is because we would prefer to actually implement our approach first. The other part is that I don’t have a lot of time left right now to explain it. It would take me probably 15 minutes to describe the process to you. … Maybe another time.

Q: Well, I guess we’ll just have to stay tuned for more on that. So in terms of the lunar habitat, would it be another version of the habitat that you’re using for orbital operations?

A: Yes, our concept of lunar base construction would be to assemble various modules and propulsion/power buses in L1, and that would constitute the base. Those propulsion systems are full of fuel, and they are integrated into the overall structure in such a way that the entire structure lands as a unified base – which essentially was once a spaceship in L1, but is landed on the surface of the moon.

This way, you avoid the significant issues that surround having to gang modules together on the lunar surface on topographical surfaces that are not perfectly even. You avoid having to connect the air locks of modules that maybe weren’t able to be brought close enough together. You avoid having to transport modules across the lunar surface, even if they were only a matter of a few hundred yards apart, and assembling them so that you have an airlock-to-airlock connection.

One module really isn’t the issue. It’s a matter of how you get three or five or seven down as one overall complex. Our architecture addresses that as a potential solution, using a combination of our propulsion buses and these expandable systems. The propulsion buses would have stanchions on them that act as the rigid points, to be able to deal with uneven topographical surfaces. The expandable systems themselves don’t mind at all being set upon a solid surface because of the shields that they have and the durability of the overall system. The rigidity of the system is such that they don’t mind at all. Even under a 1-g influence on Earth, there’s no problem – so under one-sixth it would be much less.

They come equipped with their own insulation, by the way, for space debris in low Earth orbit, and to a certain extent for micrometeoroids. So they’re already better insulated than the international space station is currently. Of course, the regolith is a significant additive that would be a great enhancement of the protection.

So anyway, the base is assembled in L1 and proceeds to the lunar surface. Because it’s not having to fly direct, it has wider opportunities: Bases can be sent to multiple alternate landing sites. It can be occupied or unoccupied at the time it is deployed to the lunar surface. So you save a lot of time, a lot of money, and lots of lives potentially during assembly, because it’s going to be a very risky situation to assemble modules and try to gang them together on the surface.

Q: The idea is that the L1 balance point would provide a relative stable place where you don’t have to worry about things wandering away all that much, and it’s a stable place to work with multiple systems to put it together.

A: Well, yeah, and furthermore, as a precursor to that, we will have already assembled those spacecraft in theory in low Earth orbit. If they can be congregated and ganged together in low Earth orbit, then we’re fairly optimistic that can also be done in L1.

Q: On that topic of orbital operations, can you give me an update on your plans for the next orbital launch, for Genesis 2?

A: We’re making preparations for sending various folks to Russia. We have a sizable crew of people who go back and forth – I think it’s on the order of 21 or 22 people we send over there. And I will be adding myself to that number over there as well. We’re looking forward to the launch in April, and things are good to go.

We have a replacement Biobox that we’re putting in the spacecraft. Since we have the extra time, we want to give the little living animals that we’re flying the best chance for longevity in space. So we had a duplicate Biobox, and we are in the process of replacing the old one with the new one, with the same constituents of ants and beetles and scorpions. In fact, we are outfitting a scorpion with the same identification marks that the fifth-grade class that named that particular scorpion is going to recognize. We’ve added some color to that scorpion so that the fifth-graders will recognize it.

So everything is going to be replaced in the new Biobox as it was in the old one, with the intent that we’ve provided some extra lifetime in orbit.

Q: And the time frame of sometime around or after April 1 still applies?

A: Yes, we expect to have updates over the next couple of weeks, before the 15th of March. We will be making more announcements as to the accuracy of that time. We are getting ready to ship the spacecraft out. We still anticipate an April launch, so we’re good to go.

Q: In terms of the time frame for this larger lunar infrastructure project, you mentioned that there would be a test of the regolith transfer system later this year. Are there any other milestones you’re looking forward to? Do you expect to make some sort of full-featured presentation to NASA at a particular time, or do you just take each step as it comes, leading to the post-2020 time frame?

A: Our Job One is to take care of our business in low Earth orbit and try to perfect our spacecraft through these Pathfinder launches. Then try to launch our Sundancer spacecraft in 2010, our Galaxy spacecraft in ’08 – and perfect our propulsion buses and our power systems, and start assembly of our first commercial space complex in 2010, 2011, 2012. By 2012, we should have two habitable modules in orbit, and one large propulsion and power system.

That will constitute the beginning of our opportunity. If we can do that, I would say that’s an exercise that’s applicable to the L1 scenario.

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Comments

Just an off-the-wall idea:

Zero Gravity + external space walk + compressed air jets + GPS positioning + license agreement = space Quiddich = 1 billion additional space enthusiasts.

I think the killer app will be something that takes place outside the walls of the Bigelow module.

so will space residency be a reality for only the super wealthy? will capitalism corrupt space?

lets take this in a different direction.

here's the deal. were creating a new culture, and a new nation if you will. what will be the governmental structure? how will our relations with the planet be determined. what do i say? i say break away from earthly political ties. and start a new society dedicated to the advancement of mankind into the frontier. its a PERFECT OPPORTUNITY. dont let it pass us by. only at this point can we begin to concieve a utopian society. all residents striving for common goals. i believe residency should not be based on our monetary possesion. but should be reserved for those who contain the knowledge for advancement of the colony. let this be a breeding ground for new technologies and thought. with a high concentration of scientific minds and with high funding avaiable from bigelow, anything can be created. although this opens up markets for new endeavors such as zero gravity sports. i believe that capitalizing on these new markets should be a means of funding the entire colony. not one residence pocket.

just a rough outline of my beliefs on the topic. i'd love feedback.

reef_madness@adelphia.net.

I am continually surprised, though I shouldn't be, at those individuals that constantly find reason and/or excuses for not advancing humanity. It is our nature to explore that which is beyond us; be it through science, philosophy, or theology.  We are a species of adventurers and searchers. Our very nature is to see and experience that which is over the next bluff.

I too thank god that there are individuals that are ready use their fortunes to expand humanity's knowledge in such ventures. My only regret is that it has not been attempted sooner.

bravo for Mr. Bigelow and those that also embrace these challenges. If our forebearers had not; most of us wouldn't be here, plus we would still be hunter-gatherers.
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Bigelow inflatable modules for NASA?

Happy to see that my suggestion of a Bigelow/NASA module seems come true just a month after my (Jan 14, 2007) BigelowOrion's article!

http://www.gaetanomarano.it/articles/016_BigelowOrion.html

Lunar Space Station and “base first” NASA decision?

Happy to see that, three years after the VSE announcement and one year after the ESAS plan (both based ONLY on a few RISKY Apollo-like lunar sortie-missions) three months ago NASA has turned 180° its strategy, as explained in this (Jan. 15, 2007) The Space Review's article:

http://www.thespacereview.com/article/782/1

and as suggested NINE months ago in my (June 5, 2006) "Lunar Space Station" article:

http://www.gaetanomarano.it/articles/009_LSS.html

from my article:

"...the only way to reduce (very very much!) the risk to fail many moon missions and lose many crews, is to increase the astronauts' life support time on the moon, with 2+ Crew Habitats and a 6+ months of extra life support, and in lunar orbit, with this modular Lunar Space Station and 6+ months of life support, to be used for standard (very long!) moon missions and if something goes wrong on the moon or in lunar orbit, to wait for a manned rescue or a new remote-controlled CEV or LSAM sent from earth or for one or more automated re-supply vehicles and, of course, the Crew Habitats and the Space Station, must be sent before the first manned missions..."

"...the REAL (and GIANT) money saving (and a moon exploration "quantum leap"!) may happen if NASA changes (now!) its (bad!) "100% expendable" rockets/vehicles/moon-missions' architecture to use only a 20+ times reusable LSAM for moon exploration, that will reduce the missions' costs, needs only ONE mid-size rocket to launch all the moon hardware and will MULTIPLY by TEN the number of moon landings/missions because each Crew may stay 3+ months on the LSS and accomplish 10+ moon landings/missions (with multiple LSAM re-supply/re-fuel/maintenance) then, they come back to earth..."

"...the "LSS/moonHabitats/reusableLSAM" architecture may have a (very intersting) POLITICAL ADVANTAGE for NASA, because, if they use the (very expensive!) "all-in-one" ESAS architecture, the ENTIRE plan may delay many years after the first (little!) "shuttle-like" problem or may END if some crews will die on the moon (or if the TV audience after 3 missions will be too low...) while, if NASA will use the early VSE funds to build some (20+ years stable) "infrastructures" on the moon and in lunar orbit, they can be sure to receive all the funds to maintain/re-supply/support the LSS and (maybe) also the funds to accomplish many moon missions..."

.
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Thomas Schroeder wanted some feedback on his idea of an apolitical new world order for off-Earth society. His Utopian ideas should be encouraged even though they will probably never be implemented. The human race needs a goal always in front of it to stimulate our better instincts. Unfortunately, some politicos here on Earth always act against our common interests and for their own personal welfare. They are usually the ones who have the power, love the glory, and forever and ever will look out for their own interests. 'Twas ever thus, and will continue to be so. Too bad. Keep dreaming, Thomas.
This is a cultural phenomenon. And I cant stress enough the importance of who gains a foothold on space colonization. And I believe its the sole duty of the private scientific community to establish this foothold. There are patterns in human cultural evolution, some observable some not. And from what I see this may be the most pivotal event in centuries. If a single nation claims the moon? how will this tip the global balance? I dont necessarily believe that a utopian society can exist. To many variables beyond our control. But I speak of it as more of a metaphore for the necessary paradigm shift. A paradigm shift that is essential to usher us into a new age.

Hunter-gatherer > lower,middle,upper barbarianism > civilization...stellar civilization?

whats next?

I think we need to appreciate the fact that what will be done in the next 10-20 years pertaining to colonization, will have its place in shaping the future of mankind. A very powerfull keystone that needs to be seized by the right hands.

???
Remember this famous quote?
'Why climb Mt. Everest?'
'Because it'e THERE!'
Bigelow is right and wrong at the same time. He mentions a structure only buried under a couple of feet of soil, not the 12 or more required.

In fact it has been computed (*) that on average a maximum 20% of time should be spent by humans outside the protection of a minimum 4 meters of regolith.

(*) R Silberberg et al, ‘Radiation Transport of Cosmic Ray Nuclei in Lunar Material and Radiation Doses’, in W W Mendell, ed, ‘Lunar Bases and Space Activities of the 21st Century’, Lunar and Planetary Institute, 1985, p668

If we seriously consider going back to the Moon, resources should be spent investigating how easy it will be to bury those Habitats (inflatable or otherwise).

But excavated regolith is only one option and not the most practical one given the amounts of soil that will have to be moved to make comfortable living out of a stay on the Moon.

Other ideas involve lava tubes, of which there should be aplenty, and artificial giant caves.

Especially the caves should be easy to create with explosives, if there is no water in the lunar rocks.

http://omnologos.wordpress.com/2007/
03/02/where-to-build-inflatable-lunar-structures/

CosmicLog (read through Larry Kellogg’s “Lunar Update” mailing list) has an interview about innovative lunar structures with Robert Bigelow of “Inflatable Space Station” fame.
Bigelow does mention of an
Bigelow,is leading the commercial space race,but he will not acheive his goalbecause he has failed to plan for the growth of food crops that will also scrub the air.He is still depending on NASA and they are locked into the use of hydroponics, which for a tax funded government agency is OK because they can afford to spend millions of tax payer dollars since they are not operating for profit.

Hydroponic solutions weigh about 15# per US gallon  and payload cost aboard the space schuttle exceed $15,000.00 per pound which equals $225,000.00 US dollars per gallon, The cost alone renders the use of hydroponics by for profit companies null and void.

My company, Dragon Rose has pioneered a less costly way to grow food crops that will also aid in air regeneration without using soil,or root soaking hydroponic solutions and very small amounts of water.

What good is a space hotel that doesn't serve food to its patrons.

derrick@dragonroseinc.com
I have finally made it, this is a great step for mankind. oh and moon cheese doesn't taste like cheddar, it tastes more like parmesan.

anyways good luck to other explorers and

THANK GOD FOR THE VISIONARIES
Some people say that we should fix our problems here on Earth first, but we can do that only when we have technology and knowledge, and space is a good place to gain all that. If someone thinks that we have pollution/poverty/global deforestation/wars/global warming/etc. becouse of technology, then we were mistaken when we took that stone XXXXX years ago.
People like Bigelow and Musk give the CEOs of Boeing and Lockheed sleepless nights. Sure they will have some problems, but I wish them luck.

As for spending the money down here on Earth... sure let's do it, but pull the money from corporate welfare and bloated military budgets (of which I derive my paycheck) the world around.

The sooner we get all of our eggs out of one basket, the better.
There were starving people in Spain in 1492 when Columbus set sail. Sure, Isabella and Ferdinand COULD have used the money it cost for Columbus' voyages to feed the poor. But where would the human race be without new discoveries and exploration?
To use an analogy for all the "earth first" people.  It's easier to repair a car if you're not in it.
Remember that NASA is a Goverment agency now. Not to be confused with the organization that put a man on the moon almost 40 years ago. The space shuttle and the ISS are under acheivements typical for any government agency. Way too expensive, not terribly useful and dangerous. What's amazing here is that NASA is cooperating with someone who is planning on walking in their cabbage patch! The idea that a private company with a real leader in charge can do what the government can't do is not surprizing or new. Where would we be if the government had granted a monopoly to a government created company for the purpose of writing and publishing a standard operating system? What you'd get is UNIX.
To the person that said Bigelow's idea was flawed because he got tax payer funded technology from NASA is wrong. I suggest you read the founding document for the for the formation of NASA. It expressly states that NASA is to perform the VERY expensive PRELIMINARY studies to see if they are viable and THEN they are charged with pushing that technology INTO the private sector so that private, MORE EFFECIENT, sector would then take over and SUPPLY NASA with CHEAPER goods and services so NASA could then buy the stuff OFF THE SHELF, rather then having to create government organizations to build and provide them.
I've been following this story with keen interest, as I've been a solid fan of space exploration and its eventual commercialization since I was a child and learned about Sputnik.  (I was born in 1951).  Of course, costs will leave such trips out of reach for most of us in the near- to mid-term, but it's exciting -- and a bit unexpected -- that it's taking the private space industry to rekindle enthusiasm amongst the general public that the Mercury-Gemini-Apollo programs did during their missions.

Good for Mr. Bigelow (and others) for making a significant contribution to expanding the frontiers of space.
Comment for Fuzzy...If mankind is to survive, if mankind survives long enough.  We will need to do these kind of things in order to survive.  One day our Sun will engulf the Earth and mankind will go extinct if we do not reach out to the stars.  We have to start somewhere!!!
Yes, What are the stock options for the first real Rommmulin Bar tender in your ops. That can make pizza as well as serve tea, ale, and wine among other things that a a must need to be done things???!!!
I may be only 14 but i already know what i want to be - i want to be a Aerospace Engineer and this is the kind of stuff i want to be designing and building. Thanks, Bigelow, Virgin Galactic, Armadillo, Rocketplane, and Blue Origin for giving me inspiration.


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