Title: Cylindrical Habitats - Horizontal or
1 Cylindrical Habitats - Horizontal or
Vertical ?
- Gary C. Fisher
- The Mars Foundation
- GFisher_at_MarsHome.org
- Rutgers University
- Symposium On Lunar Settlements
- Piscataway, NJ June 5, 2007
2Background and parameters of this work
- The Mars Foundations Mars Homestead Project is
an ongoing effort to define the first
self-sufficient settlement for Mars. - This effort produced an initial design, The
Hillside Base using habitat structures, mostly
cylinders, constructed on site from in situ
materials over the course of 6 to 8 years by 12
people.
3The Hillside Base
Graphic by Georgi Petrov for the Mars Foundation
4The Plains Base
Graphic by Adam Burch for the Mars Foundation
5The Plains Base
Graphic by Adam Burch for the Mars Foundation
6Three Generations of Habitats (Benaroya 2006)
- Prefabricated and preoutfitted hard shell
modules. - Assembly of components fabricated on Earth with
some assembly required and - Large scale building structures comprised
substantially of indigenous materials.
7The criteria of interest then are
- Ease of assembly both from the standpoint of low
labor input, but also requiring minimal tooling,
especially imported tooling. - Ease of transport of the finished structure.
- Ease of deployment site preparation,
positioning, attachment - Thermal characteristics
- Radiation shielding ease of applying a regolith
cover - Useful life
- Useable interior space
- Pressure retention
- Site independence build and deploy these almost
anywhere on the Moon.
8Why Cylindrical Habitat Structures ?
- For the purposes of creating in situ habitable
spaces for a Lunar settlement, cylinder-shaped
structures present the best near-term option over
alternatives, such as - - spherical or dome structures
- - excavated structures
- - lined lava tubes
- - inflated structures (noncylindrical)
- - regolith covered masonry vaulted arches.
9Cylindrical Habitat Structure Options
- - Length
- - Diameter
- - Hemispherical or flat end caps
- - Rigid or inflatable
- - True cylinder, ellipsoid or flattened
- - Single or multi-wall
- The primary consideration, however, is whether
to stand the cylinder up vertically on an end, or
lay it down horizontally on its side.
10Proposed
- That the simplest, safest, and easiest to deploy
cylindrical habitat would be one that has a flat
end on which it is stood up like a beer (or tuna)
can, one story high, with the top end cap being
hemispherical. -
- These would be connected via smaller diameter
cylindrical connector modules that can also be
used as air locks. - The modules would have domed solar tubes, that
can double as emergency exits, to pipe sunlight
down through the regolith cover into the
structure to provide some of the interior
illumination.
11Proposed
12Proposed
Lunar 2.5 m / Mars
Floor area is 6.05 m2 (65.12 ft2)
13Proposed
NASA Diameter is
3.65m
14So why not horizontal habitats?
lt- ISS Destiny Module
BIOPLEX at JSC -gt
15So why not horizontal habitats?
- They roll!
- 2. Footings are more complicated.
- They are hard to connect.
- 4. Hard to cover with regolith.
- 5. Limited full headroom.
16So why not horizontal habitats?
They roll!
17So why not horizontal habitats?
There are a number of alternative
approaches Attach legs (most likely attached to
U-shaped cradles) to the cylinder that rest on
pre-constructed footings and allow for some
height adjustment.
18So why not horizontal habitats?
Put the cylinder inside a box frame which is
then positioned on a pre-constructed footing.
19So why not horizontal habitats?
Consider this manageable size horizontal habitat.
Floor area is 18.77 m2 (202.04 ft2)
20So why not horizontal habitats?
Linear deployment has safety issues.
21So why not horizontal habitats?
Connectors help solve the escape route problem.
22So why not horizontal habitats?
Connectors help solve the safety issues, but how
do you cover this with regolith?
23So why not horizontal habitats?
Connectors in series allow for closer packing.
24So why not horizontal habitats?
What is a manageable size? How much headroom
depends upon where you put the floor.
25Vertical Habitat Arrangements
4 Connections 6 Connections
3 Connections
26Vertical Habitat Arrangements
2 Doors 6 Connections
27New Conclusion Put your cylinders in boxes!
Graphic by Adam Burch for the Mars Foundation