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Science & Technology
SpaceX delivers world's 1st inflatable room for astronauts
2016-04-11
[HOSTED2.AP.ORG] SpaceX has made good on a high-priority delivery: the world's first inflatable room for astronauts.
This is going on in one corner of consciousness. In the other people are chopping heads off, just like they did in the 7th century.
A SpaceX Dragon fat merchantman arrived at the International Space Station on Sunday, two days after launching from Cape Canaveral. Station astronauts used a robot arm to capture the Dragon, orbiting 250 miles above Earth.

The Dragon holds 7,000 pounds of freight, including the soft-sided compartment built by Bigelow Aerospace. The pioneering pod -- packed tightly for launch -- should swell to the size of a small bedroom once filled with air next month.

It will be attached to the space station this Saturday, but won't be inflated until the end of May. The technology could change the way astronauts live in space: NASA envisions inflatable habitats in a couple decades at Mars, while Bigelow Aerospace aims to launch a pair of inflatable space stations in just four years for commercial lease.

For now, the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module -- BEAM for short -- will remain mostly off-limits to the six-man station crew. NASA wants to see how the experimental chamber functions, so the hatch will stay sealed except when astronauts enter a few times a year to collect measurements and swap out sensors.
Posted by:Fred

#11  So did the shuttle external fuel tanks, Chuck.
One time engineering in a throwaway society doesn't allow for reuse when you can get less, much later for more money.
Posted by: Those Phaiter1709   2016-04-11 23:15  

#10  On a more serious note, the inflatable rooms combined with the reusable launchers reduces the cost of building a space station. A good thing.

Now to figure out what to do with a space station, other than as a tourist trap. :-)
Posted by: Chuck   2016-04-11 18:29  

#9  Space is not safe:
"One tiny crack in the hull and our blood boils in 13 seconds. A solar flare might crop up, cook us in our seats. And wait till you're sitting pretty with a case of Andorian shingles. See if you're still so relaxed when your eyeballs are bleeding. Space is disease and danger wrapped in darkness and silence." - Leonard McCoy
Posted by: Chuck   2016-04-11 18:12  

#8  BUT, Is it a safe space?
Posted by: newc   2016-04-11 17:19  

#7  
Wikipedia on Genesis I

Mission status Retired, on orbit

Wikipedia on Genesis II

Mission status Retired, on orbit
Posted by: 3dc   2016-04-11 13:59  

#6  Bigelow has or maybe still has 2 test units flying. There were webcams on them. Pretty boring ones. No idea if they are still working. July 12, 2006, and June 28, 2007, Bigelow launched the Genesis I and II modules.
Posted by: 3dc   2016-04-11 13:56  

#5  
Posted by: Vast Right Wing Conspiracy   2016-04-11 13:54  

#4  heat coat in foil. cold build it from insulated matereils. build in heat pipes to carry warm to cold. Probably already have that solved.
Posted by: Shuper Turkeyneck8620   2016-04-11 12:52  

#3  Depends on which way you are facing, tex.

Exposed to the sun it gets very hot. In the shadow super cold. Satellites and manned craft have to keep rotating to provide a uniform heating and cooling to the craft so the radiator systems can keep up.

I would expect some sort of radiator system that hooks into the space station on the pod.
Posted by: DarthVader   2016-04-11 10:52  

#2  An orbital bounce house?
Wonder if anybody ran a risk analysis on environmental fatigue or debris impact.
Posted by: Skidmark   2016-04-11 10:05  

#1  I thought it was cold in space. How you going to heat it?
Posted by: texhooey   2016-04-11 05:48  

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