Nasa reveals bursting habitat that created boom in Houston in July
On 9 July, a loud boom resounded around the Houston Texas area around Johnson Space Center, and Nasa has now released footage of the test that caused the sound.
In a post on the social media network Twitter, Johnson Space Center revealed footage of a burst pressure test of an inflatable habitat prototype, an armoured membrane that could be inflated in Earth orbit to serve as a space station module, or on the Moon as part of a future Moon base.
In a burst pressure test, engineers inflate a pressure vessel to the point where it bursts. This helps them understand both the extreme safety limits of the pressure vessel and may help in the design process.
In this case, the pressure vessel was a prototype of the Large Integrated Flexible Environment, or Life habitat being developed by Colorado-based Sierra Space. Life habitats are constructed of the same tough, Vectran fibers used in the landing airbags for Nasa's Spirit and Opportunity Mars rovers, and at 27-feet in diameter, offer about 984 cubic feet of interior volume[*], according to the Sierra Space Website.
During the July pressure burst test, a one-third scale Life habit was inflated to an internal pressure of 192 pounds per square inch (PSI), according to a Sierra Space tweet about the test. That exceeded the safety requirement of 182.4 PSI, the company noted.
[*] 300 cubic meters of pressurized volume (about 1/3 the pressurized volume on the international space station)
(Score: 3, Interesting) by JoeMerchant on Monday September 19 2022, @06:44PM (1 child)
The question is: what does that sacrificial shield contain? My vote if I were living there: water, inside a self-healing membrane.
A couple of the challenges are: a 1 gram pebble moving at 20kmph is going to need a lot of mass to drag its speed down to something safe. Also: gamma rays and similar have a nasty habit of multiplying their ionizing potential when passing through moderate mass shields. Thin shields (like the current ISS walls) rarely intercept the gamma rays so they just pass through, but at moderate mass (like 1cm of lead) Compton scattering means that the gamma ray spawns a number of lower energy, but still highly ionizing, particles - making the radiation worse than no shield at all. However, in most normal "space weather" several meters of water is enough to stop the spawned particles too...
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(Score: 2) by PiMuNu on Tuesday September 20 2022, @10:51AM
The aim is to destroy the pebble rather than slow it down. At such high velocity, even a moderate barrier can destroy stuff.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whipple_shield [wikipedia.org]